Sources
83 sources in the catalog, triaged by content-reuse licence (83 done) — openmeans we may extract & store the content, restricted means link-only, unknown means no clear signal was found. Filter by area or licence.
14 of 83 sources (filtered · clear)
- ImmigrationPlaybooks/guides/toolkitsRestricted
Asylum Seekers and Refugees Guide
Signposting for people who are asylum or refuge seekers in the UK
Advicenow ↗Licence: none found (all-rights-reserved copyright; limited personal/adviser/educational copying permitted)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Advicenow's Terms & Conditions page states "All the material on this website is copyright of Advicenow or is used with the permission of the owners" and grants users no IP rights. It permits only narrow uses: copying/printing a reasonable number of portions for personal use, printing for use with clients in advice/community settings, and copying teaching resources for educational establishments. Crucially it then states: "Any other use of materials on this website including reproduction for purposes other than those noted above, distribution, republication, transmission, re-transmission, modification, or public showing whether for gain or otherwise is strictly prohibited." No Creative Commons, OGL, or open licence appears site-wide or on the asylum/refugees resource page (which carries only the standard "© Advicenow 2026" footer). Extracting and storing/republishing content in an internal resource library would fall under the prohibited "reproduction... republication... transmission" rather than the permitted exceptions, so this is restricted: link-only. Caveats: this is the site-wide stance and some material is third-party "used with permission of the owners," so even the limited permissions may not extend to all embedded content; a permission request to Advicenow would be the route to anything beyond personal/adviser/educational copying. Triage only, not legal advice.
- ImmigrationValidated professional servicesRestricted
Asylum services
Non-legal advice for people considering or claiming asylum in the UK
Migrant Help ↗Licence: none found (all-rights-reserved style terms; reuse prohibited without written permission)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Migrant Help's site-wide Terms & Conditions explicitly prohibit reuse. Under "Limitation of liability" clause (c) it states verbatim: "The website may not be copied either in full or in part, or the contents be retained or re-utilised without express prior written permission from us. Any such copying, either in full or in part, extraction or re-utilising of our material without prior written permission is prohibited." This directly forbids extracting and storing content (the "retained or re-utilised" wording). No Creative Commons, OGL, public-domain, or "free to use/share/adapt" signal appears anywhere on the homepage, footer, privacy policy, or T&C; the only legal footer links are Privacy policy and Terms & conditions (no licence page), and the privacy policy itself names these T&C as the governing reuse document. Caveats: this is a single site-wide T&C with no per-resource open-licence override observed, and a "Third Party Information" clause notes some material is third-party, so even content reproduced with permission may carry separate restrictions. The live site returns HTTP 403 to automated fetchers (Google reCAPTCHA/Termly bot protection), so this was read via a browser-User-Agent HTTP request to the canonical pages; treat as triage, not legal advice. Permission to extract could be sought directly (info@migranthelpuk.org).
- ImmigrationToolsUnknown
Can I vote
Tool to find out if people can vote in UK elections
Just Register / Citizens UK / Migrant Democracy Project ↗Licence: none foundevidence ↗Why this verdict?
Can I Vote? is a UK voter-eligibility tool run jointly by Citizens UK, the Migrant Democracy Project, and Just Register. The XML sitemap (page-sitemap.xml) enumerates the entire site as just four pages — home, /privacy-policy/, /results-vote-check/, and /faqs/ — so coverage here is effectively complete. None of these pages carries any copyright notice (no © symbol, no "all rights reserved"), Creative Commons badge, or content-reuse statement; the homepage footer links only to Privacy Policy, FAQs, About Just Register, and Donate. Candidate licence/terms paths (/terms, /terms-of-use, /license, /copyright, /legal, /about) all return HTTP 404, the actual resource page (/faqs/, the substantive guidance content) states no per-item licence, and the only legal document on the site — the privacy policy — is silent on copyright, IP, or reuse. A targeted web search for the site's licence terms returned nothing site-specific. With no permission granted (so not "open") and yet no explicit all-rights-reserved assertion either, plus the practical reality that the content likely embeds UK electoral/government eligibility material whose rights sit elsewhere, the conservative verdict is unknown. Caveat: assessment is site-wide; no per-resource licence exists, and absence of a notice does not imply reuse permission — under UK law content is copyright by default even without a notice.
- ImmigrationValidated professional servicesRestricted
Employability support to migrants and refugees
Employability support to migrants and refugees
Refugee Action ↗Licence: none found (all rights reserved — "Copyright of Refugee Action", reproduction prohibited)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Refugee Action's website terms state verbatim that all site elements "are the property of Refugee Action... is Copyright of Refugee Action" and that "Reproduction is prohibited without the prior consent of Refugee Action," warning that unauthorised use "may give [rise] to a claim for damages and/or be a criminal offence." The homepage and the actual Pathways to Work resource page both carry a "© 2016 Refugee Action" footer with no Creative Commons links or open-reuse statement anywhere. This is a conservative all-rights-reserved posture, so the library should link only, not extract/store content. Caveats: the assessment is site-wide; the terms also note the site may contain third-party/licensed material (e.g. photography) acknowledged separately. WebFetch returned HTTP 403 (bot protection), so pages were retrieved via a browser-user-agent HTTP GET instead; this is triage, not legal advice.
- ImmigrationFunding opportunitiesRestricted
Grants
List of grants provided by the Foundation
Rayne Foundation ↗Licence: All rights reserved (site content); CC BY 4.0 applies only to the separate awarded-grants datasetevidence ↗Why this verdict?
The site-wide footer on the homepage, the source funding page, and the privacy page all carry the verbatim notice "© 2026 The Rayne Foundation. ... All rights reserved." with no open-reuse grant. Every standard licence/terms path (/terms, /terms-of-use, /terms-and-conditions, /copyright, /legal) returns HTTP 404, and the only footer links (Privacy, Cookies) grant no content-reuse rights. The single Creative Commons BY 4.0 licence found on the site is explicitly scoped to the awarded-grants dataset ("our awarded grants are available to view... This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License"), i.e. the 360Giving open data — not the editorial funding-guidance content of the source page. Caveat: this verdict is for the editorial/page content; the grants data is separately open under CC BY 4.0, and the assessment reflects site-wide notices since no per-resource licence was found on the funding pages.
- ImmigrationValidated professional servicesRestricted
Kompassi
Digital tool that connects services from a variety of service providers that refugees, people seeking asylum and migrants can be signposted to or directly referred to
Kompassi ↗Licence: All rights reserved (© The Developer Society 2024)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Kompasi (kompasi.org) is a UK service directory for refugees/asylum seekers/migrants run by The Developer Society and partners. Its Privacy Notice & T&Cs page (/privacy-policy) states "We own copyrights on this site and in material published on it... All our rights are reserved. © The Developer Society 2024," permits linking only conditionally ("provided you do so in a way that is fair and legal"), explicitly prohibits iframe/embedding, and directs any other use to a permission request at data@dev.ngo. The /about page independently shows "© 2024 All rights reserved." No Creative Commons, OGL, public-domain, or "free to use/share/adapt" statement was found anywhere, and despite "The Data Place" being listed as a data-governance partner there is no open-data licence published. Caveats: this is a site-wide assessment of editorial content; the underlying service listings are factual data that may have separate provenance, and the explicit instruction to request permission means reuse may be obtainable by contacting them — but absent that, content must be link-only, not extracted/stored.
- ImmigrationPlaybooks/guides/toolkitsOpen
Migrant Digital Justice Toolkit
Migrant Digital Justice Toolkit
Open Rights Group ↗Licence: Custom "Free to reuse except where stated" statement (no formal/named licence)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Every page I checked on migranttoolkit.uk carries the same footer notice: "©. Free to reuse except where stated." This explicit free-to-reuse permission appears site-wide - on the homepage, on section pages (what-are-digital-rights, how-it-works), and on an actual resource page (the MRN Know Your Rights guide) - so it is the operative content-reuse signal for the site, which is run by the Open Rights Group. It is a custom statement, not a named/formal licence: there is no Creative Commons badge or link anywhere, and dedicated /terms, /terms-of-use, /license, /licence, and /copyright pages all return HTTP 404. Caveat: the licence is owner-stated and explicitly conditional ("except where stated"), so individual resources - especially third-party/embedded materials reproduced from other organisations (e.g. JCWI, Migrants' Rights Network), interview transcripts, and government legislation excerpts - may carry their own restrictions or be reserved; each item should be checked for a per-resource notice before extraction, and original authorship credited. This is triage, not legal advice.
- ImmigrationResource libraryRestricted
Publications and Resources (Immigration)
Publications and Resources (Immigration)
Public Law Project ↗Licence: All rights reserved — "© 2026 Public Law Project" (no reuse licence found)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Every page I checked carries a plain copyright assertion ("© 2026 Public Law Project") with no reuse grant: the homepage footer, the "Legal" disclaimer page (/legal-disclaim/), the privacy and accessibility pages, and two actual resource pages (the "Lessons to learn" asylum-children report and the "Remote immigration and asylum advice" report) all show only the © notice — no Creative Commons badge/link, no Open Government Licence, no public-domain or "free to share/adapt" statement, site-wide or per-item. Dedicated /terms/, /terms-of-use/, /copyright/ and /about/ URLs return HTTP 404, and a web search surfaced no reuse terms; the resources hub adds only a liability disclaimer ("PLP accept no responsibility for the contents of these items"), not a permission. The signal is clear and consistent (copyright asserted, no permission given), so this is restricted rather than unknown — content may be linked to but not extracted/stored without PLP's permission. Caveat: this reflects PLP's own posture; some publications are joint/co-branded briefings and may embed third-party material with separate terms, so per-document checks remain prudent.
- ImmigrationToolsRestricted
Purpose-driven language services
Purpose-driven language services
Tarjimly ↗Licence: All rights reserved (proprietary Terms of Use)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Tarjimly's Terms of Use (https://www.tarjimly.org/terms) are explicit and all-rights-reserved. Section 7 states "The Service, and the media and materials contained in the Service, including all intellectual property rights in the Service, are the sole and exclusive property of Tarjimly and its licensors," and Section 5.1 forbids users to "copy, reproduce, distribute, publish, display, perform, transmit, stream or broadcast any part of the Service without prior written authorization," with only a "limited license" granted and "no other rights, licenses, or immunities" implied. I found no Creative Commons badge, OGL, public-domain, or "free to share/adapt" statement anywhere I checked (homepage footer, Terms, About/Our Purpose page) and a web search surfaced no open-licence signal. Caveat: this is the site-wide content licence; individual embedded third-party materials are out of scope, and the site's footer notes Tarjimly is now part of CLEAR Global, so terms could change — but as it stands, extracting and storing its content is not permitted.
- ImmigrationResource libraryRestricted
Resource library
Resource library
Migrant Help ↗Licence: none found (all-rights-reserved Terms & Conditions)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Migrant Help's Terms & Conditions contain an explicit intellectual-property clause that prohibits exactly the action in question: "The website may not be copied either in full or in part, or the contents be retained or re-utilised without express prior written permission from us. Any such copying, either in full or in part, extraction or re-utilising of our material without prior written permission is prohibited." I checked the homepage, the resources category page, two actual resource pages (the asylum-resources listing and the "What is an Aspen card?" FAQ), the privacy policy, and a backstop web search; none carried a Creative Commons badge, an open/OGL/public-domain notice, or any per-resource reuse permission that would override the site-wide terms. Verdict is restricted: content may NOT be extracted and stored — link-only unless written permission is obtained. Caveats: the assessment is site-wide (no exceptions were found, but Migrant Help may grant permission on request); and any third-party material embedded in their resources could carry separate terms. The live footer copyright line is JavaScript-rendered and not in the raw HTML, but it does not change the verdict, which rests on the Terms & Conditions. This is triage, not legal advice.
- ImmigrationResource libraryRestricted
Resource library
Resource library
Electronic Immigration Network ↗Licence: none found (all rights reserved)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
EIN's official "Legal and copyright" page (https://www.ein.org.uk/site-info) reserves all rights: copyright is "owned by or licensed to" EIN, registered users may access content "solely for their own professional use," and users may not "download or copy, store in any medium (including any other web site), distribute, transmit, re-transmit, modify or show in public any part of the EIN website and services without the prior written consent of Electronic Immigration Network," ending with "All rights are hereby reserved by EIN." This is all-rights-reserved with no blanket reuse permission, so extracting and storing its content is not permitted. Caveats: (1) the page acknowledges that some individual items may be attributed to third parties and "available under licences such as Creative Commons or the Open Government Licence" — so specific resources (e.g. government legislation/reports) could carry their own open licence and would need per-item checking; (2) much of the substantive library (case law, country reports) sits behind a members' subscription. This is triage, not legal advice.
- ImmigrationToolsRestricted
Services directory
Map of place-based migration-related services across the UK
Migrant and Refugee Children’s Legal Unit (MiCLU) ↗Licence: All Rights Reserved (no reuse licence found)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
Every page I checked on miclu.org (the Migrant & Refugee Children's Legal Unit) carries an explicit site-wide footer: "Copyright 2026 Migrant & Refugee Children's Legal Unit | All Rights Reserved" — including the homepage, About, Resources, Resources & Publications, Briefings & Responses, and an individual report page (Into the Arms of Traffickers). I probed the common licence/terms URLs (/terms, /terms-of-use, /license, /licence, /copyright, /legal, /privacy, /sitemap) and all returned HTTP 404, and a web search for the site's reuse/licence terms surfaced nothing beyond the "All Rights Reserved" footers. There are no Creative Commons badges or creativecommons.org links anywhere, and no per-resource "free to share/reproduce" statement, so extracting and storing their content is not permitted without seeking direct permission. Caveats: this triage covers the HTML pages — the downloadable report PDFs could carry their own per-document terms (not inspected), and any embedded third-party material would have separate rights.
- ImmigrationValidated professional servicesUnknown
Services menu
Services by a migrant-led design agency
Migrants in Culture ↗Licence: none foundevidence ↗Why this verdict?
After a full investigation there is no content-reuse signal of any kind on migrantsinculture.com (a Squarespace-hosted UK arts/activism site). The homepage footer has no copyright notice, Creative Commons badge, or licence text; every standard legal page (/terms, /terms-of-use, /privacy, /legal, /copyright, /about) returns 404, and the sitemap confirms no terms/legal page exists anywhere. The actual content-bearing pages (/resources, /saturdayschoolresources, /posterbank, /research-and-strategic-projects) carry no per-item licence, CC link, or "free to use/share/adapt" statement, and a raw-HTML check found no creativecommons.org link (the only "license" string is Squarespace's internal data-licensed-asset-preview attribute, unrelated to reuse). A web search surfaced no site-specific reuse terms. Because there is neither an open-licence grant nor an explicit all-rights-reserved notice, the result is genuinely unknown. Caveats: this is a site-wide assessment with no per-resource grants found; many listed resources are third-party (e.g. the SKNB workbook hosted at sknb.org, Design Justice Network zines, named-author books), whose rights are separate; and under UK law content is copyright by default absent any licence, so extraction/storage should not be assumed permitted without contacting hello@migrantsinculture.com. Triage only, not legal advice.
- ImmigrationPlaybooks/guides/toolkitsOpen
The Right to Remain Toolkit
The Right to Remain Toolkit
Right to Remain ↗Licence: CC BY-NC 4.0 (Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International)evidence ↗Why this verdict?
The Right to Remain Toolkit explicitly carries a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International licence. The toolkit landing page and individual resource pages all embed the standard CC machine-readable markup (rel="license" linking to creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ with the 88x31 CC badge) plus the verbatim text: "This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. You are free to copy, share, adapt, use the material for non-commercial purposes" subject to Attribution and NonCommercial conditions. A dedicated site-wide /permissions/ page restates the same licence, so it is not limited to a single resource. This is an open Creative Commons licence, so extracting and storing the content is permitted. Caveats: (1) reuse must be non-commercial and must credit Right to Remain with a link to the licence and indication of any changes, not implying endorsement; (2) the licence covers Right to Remain's own toolkit content — any embedded third-party material (images, quoted documents) may carry separate rights; (3) this is licensing triage, not legal advice.