Chris Brouwer, Cornell Law, Apr. 22, 2024 "Professors Jaclyn Kelley-Widmer and Stephen Yale-Loehr have secured a $1.5 million grant from Crankstart for their groundbreaking initiative, the Path2Papers...
Cyrus D. Mehta and Kaitlyn Box, Apr. 23, 2024 "On April 10, 2024, USCIS issued a policy alert clarifying the term “sciences or arts” for Schedule A, Group II occupations. Schedule A...
Rafael Bernal, The Hill, Apr. 22, 2024 "A coalition of more than 100 civil rights and immigrant rights groups are calling on Congress to fund legal representation for foreign nationals in immigrant...
Not sure which LexisNexis immigration publication you need in your arsenal? Here is a link to all 32 titles available today. You're welcome!
Michael A. Clemens, April 2024 "An increasing number of migrants attempt to cross the US Southwest border without obtaining a visa or any other prior authorization. 2.5 million migrants did so in...
"Some 550,000 young undocumented immigrants have received temporary protection from deportation and work authorization since President Barack Obama created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program in June 2012, according to new data released by US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The news comes as DACA approaches its two-year anniversary in August, when Dreamers who benefitted from it will have to begin applying for renewal. As Colorlines noted in March, they’ll have to time it well: USCIS requires that they submit renewal applications between three to four months before the date it expires – no sooner or later.
The data shows that about 82 percent of all applicants since the program’s inception have been approved. A little under a third (162,007) live in California, while about half as many (88,106) are from Texas. They are overwhelmingly from Mexico, with about 77 percent of recipients showing it as their country of origin, followed by Central Americans: 20,227 El Salvadorans, 13,301 Guatemalans and 13,223 Hondurans successfully applied. The total number of applications, even including those rejected outright by USCIS, remains well below some independent estimates of the number of Dreamers eligible. Last year, the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute (MPI)estimated, using census data, that about 1.9 million “Dreamers” could be eligible." - David Iaconangelo, May 16, 2014.