Loading...

Refugee Resettlement in the US

Applying for Resettlement in the United States as a Refugee


Every year millions of people around the world are displaced by war, famine, civil unrest, and political unrest. Others are forced to flee their countries in order escape the risk of death and torture at the hands of persecutors. In mid-1998, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees estimated the world's population of refugees and asylum seekers to be 13 million. The United States works with other governmental, international, and private organizations to provide food, health care, and shelter to millions of refugees throughout the world.

Resettlement in third countries, including the United States, is considered for refugees in urgent need of protection, refugees for whom other durable solutions are not feasible, and refugees able to join close family members. In seeking durable solutions for refugees, the United States gives priority to the safe, voluntary return of refugees to their homelands. This policy, recognized in the Refugee Act of 1980, is also the preference of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). If safe, voluntary repatriation is not feasible, other durable solutions are sought including resettlement in countries of asylum within the region and resettlement in third countries.

In addition, the United States considers persons for admission into the United States as refugees of special humanitarian concern. People who meet the definition of a refugee and who are otherwise admissible to the United States may be resettled in the United States if they have not been firmly resettled in a third country. (Many grounds of inadmissibility may be waived for refugees.) Generally, refugees are people who are outside their homeland and have been persecuted in their homeland or have a well-founded fear of persecution there on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.

Asylum and refugee statuses are closely related; however, they differ depending on where a person applies for the status. If an applicant is already in the United States, he or she may apply for asylum status. If a person is not in the United States, he or she may be eligible to apply for refugee status. In either case, all people who are granted either asylum or refugee status must meet the definition of a refugee .

The Law on Refugees in the U.S.

The legal foundation for the U.S. refugee program comes from the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). For the part of the law concerning the Refugee Program, please see INA § 207 (Refugees) and INA § 101(a)(42) (Definition of Refugee). Rules published in the Federal Register explain the eligibility requirements and procedures to be followed by applicants and the government. These rules are incorporated into the Code of Federal Regulations [CFR] at 8 CFR § 207.

Applying for Refugee Status in the U.S.

If you believe that you are in need of protection as a refugee, you may wish to make your concern known to the UNHCR or to an international non-profit voluntary agency. If either of these organizations is unavailable to you, you should contact the nearest U.S. embassy or consulate. Where appropriate, a representative from one of these organizations will discuss your situation with you to find out if you might be eligible to apply for resettlement in the United States. If so, you must then complete a packet of forms, and the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will conduct a formal interview with you to determine if you qualify for refugee status. If the USCIS determines that you should be resettled in the United States as a refugee, the U.S. State Department, together with other organizations, will then complete your processing. There are no application fees. Please see the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Website for contact information (www.unhcr.org), or you may call the High Commissioner's representative in the United States at (202) 296-5191.

 

Ask a Question

*

Apr 30, 2011, 01:05 AM

"I am Faisal Ahmed ‘Baloch from Turbat Kech Baluchistan ‘Pakistan’ My date of birth is 04/04/1986. I am working for ARY News TV channel as a camera man. As you know in some days so many journalist and so many other Baloch people have been kidnapped and killed by the intelligence of Pakistan. No one is save here in this country specially those people who always speak the truth and tries to show the truth to the world. As we are Baloch so we think we are not save here. Because we feel we have been targeted for all the bad things here. Even the government of this country is also not with us. We are being ignore in every field of life by the government of this country. We can not get a good job, a small house for us to live, we can not fulfill our any dream and we can not get any thing here. So I need help from your Government please help me if you can please. I want you to let me to come in your kind country as a Refugee Resettlement. I hope you will help me. I am in need, please help me. I will be really very thankful to you. I will not write more but I am really very helpless. I need help. I hope as you read my letter you will reply me soon. I am waiting for your answer.



Best Regards
Faisal Ahmed’ Baloch
Mobile No : +92 300 3399108
E-mail : faisalahmedbaloch@gmail.com
Address : Turbat’ Baluchistan’ Pakistan "

*

Mar 6, 2011, 02:29 PM

"Iam somalian refugee south africa iam not safe"

*

Mar 6, 2011, 02:26 PM

"Iam somalian refugee in south africa
iam not safe my life, not peace country r.s.a
my shop they rob they i can't work"

****

Dec 25, 2010, 06:23 AM

"my name is Abdirahman i live in Nairobi-Kenya i am somali-Ogadene i have UNCHR mandate letter. i could not come back my home country because the government soldiers kill me i was refused to becoming a soldier of government that is why i could not be back. i need to give me possible assistance.

i highly appreciated to give me big hands "

New post

Please enter the characters you see in the picture below.