Shahram Taghavi is a barrister practising in the United Kingdom. He is a specialist in Judicial Review, Human Rights, Immigration and EU law. He was called to the England & Wales bar in 1994. He is a partner at Article 1, a law firm specialising in immigration, EU freedoms of movement and human rights law. He practised as an independent barrister at Doughty Street Chambers specialising in immigration and public law. He was head of both the Immigration and Public Law departments at Simons Muirhead & Burton solicitors. He was a Senior Barrister at Bates Wells & Braithwaite LLP as a member of their Public & Regulatory and Immigration departments, Deputy Head of Immigration at Lewis Silkin LLP, Head of Immigration at Charles Russell LLP and National Head of Immigration at Grant Thornton LLP. He has appeared in numerous "test" cases on immigration and human rights. He is a contributing author to Tolley's Employment and Personnel Procedures, Human Rights Act 1998, A Practical Guide, a contributing author to the Blackstone's Guide to the Asylum and Immigration Act 2004, the Guide to the Points-Based System and the founder and former editor of the Immigration and NationalityLaw Reports from 1997 to 2001. He also taught Constitutional and Administrative law at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London from 2001 to 2004 whilst practising at the Bar. Shahram Taghavi is recognised as a leading lawyer in the following fields by the Legal 500: immigration litigation; administrative & public law; civil liberties & human rights. He is recommended as a leading lawyer in the following fields in Chambers and Partners: Personal immigration; Business immigration. The directories have described him as "brains on legs", "excellent", having a "dynamic touch" and a "calm and reassuring manner and inside-out knowledge of immigration law", a lawyer whose "knowledge shines through", and a "respected advocate". The 2015 Edition of the UKChambers & Partners describes him as "Absolutely first class in terms of his knowledge and pragmatism". Shahram Taghavi has been involved in many of the key test cases challenging the Home Secretary's tightening of the UK's immigration laws such as Pankina, the successful challenge to the coalition government's 2010 immigration cap and Alvi. He was also the lawyer behind the challenge to the UK's secret 'blacklist' that permits immigration officials to actively discriminate against certain nationalities. He continues to lecture on immigration, public and human rights law and is regularly called as an expert witness on immigration and human rights law in civil and criminal matters.