sabato 10 gennaio 2026

Report on Legal Outreach Activities Carried Out During the Year 2025 Approximately 172,000 total content views between January 2025 and January 2026

 


Report on Legal Outreach Activities Carried Out During the Year 2025

Approximately 172,000 total content views between January 2025 and January 2026

During the year 2025, my professional activity as a lawyer, primarily focused on immigration law, was accompanied by a sustained and structured activity of legal outreach, aimed at facilitating a clearer understanding of legal frameworks, case law developments, and procedural aspects of significant public relevance.

This outreach activity complemented my legal practice and developed through the production and dissemination of legal and informational content across various digital formats, with the objective of making complex aspects of immigration law more accessible, while maintaining a rigorous approach to legal sources and jurisprudence and fully respecting the principles of accuracy and professional responsibility inherent in the legal profession.

In the interest of transparency and accountability, I consider it appropriate to publish aggregated data relating to the consumption of outreach content produced during the period January 2025 – January 2026.

During the reference period, the legal content disseminated as part of this activity recorded approximately 172,000 total content views, understood as:

  • readings of legal articles and explanatory materials;

  • views of video-based legal content;

  • listens to audio content and podcasts.

This figure refers exclusively to actual content consumption and does not include metrics related to mere exposure or visibility (such as impressions or reach), in accordance with a prudent and methodologically rigorous approach.

The content addressed, in particular:

Alongside content consumption, outreach activity was supported by professional dissemination through social media channels, particularly LinkedIn, where during the same period the published content generated over 112,000 impressions, reaching approximately 47,000 unique users.
These figures are reported separately, as they relate to visibility metrics and are not included in the calculation of content views mentioned above.

This report is intended to provide a concise and verifiable overview of the informational impact of a legal outreach activity closely connected to the exercise of the legal profession, conducted in accordance with the principles of accuracy, restraint, and professional responsibility that characterize the role of a lawyer.

Legal outreach activities will continue throughout 2026, in continuity with my professional practice, with the aim of contributing to greater legal awareness in the field of immigration law and to a more informed public understanding of its legal and social implications.

Avv. Fabio Loscerbo
Attorney at Law – Bologna Bar Association

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New on TikTok: Residence permit denied by the Police but granted by the Court: a job and real integration are enough for special protection Welcome to a new episode of the podcast Immigration Law. My name is lawyer Fabio Loscerbo, and today we address a very practical issue: what happens when the Police deny a residence permit, but the Court overturns that decision. We are talking about a judgment of the Court of Bologna, case number 591 of 2025, concerning the recognition of special protection . The Police had denied the permit, arguing that the applicant had not demonstrated sufficient integration. This is a very common reasoning in practice: authorities often expect an almost “perfect” level of integration, as if a foreign national had to prove complete and definitive social inclusion. The Court takes a different approach, one that is more consistent with the law and recent case law. It clearly states that full integration is not required. What matters is a serious and concrete path of integration, even if it is still ongoing. In this case, the applicant had a stable job, an income, had attended language courses, and had been living in Italy for several years. All these elements, taken together, show real social integration. At this point, a key legal principle comes into play: the right to private life under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. This concept does not only concern family ties, but also includes social relationships, work, and the life a person builds over time. The Court states that removing a person in such circumstances would mean uprooting them and seriously affecting their fundamental rights. It also adds an important point: if there are no concerns related to public safety or public order, the State’s interest in expulsion becomes weak. The outcome is clear: the Court recognizes the right to a residence permit for special protection, valid for two years, renewable and convertible into a work permit . The message of this decision is straightforward: if a person works, integrates, and builds a life in Italy, this reality cannot be ignored. And this is exactly where the future of immigration law will increasingly be decided. Thank you for listening, and see you soon for a new episode of Immigration Law.

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