Annual Refugee Admissions to the United States by Fiscal Year, 1975 to mid-2018
Annual Asylum Grants in the United States by Fiscal Year, 1990-2016
The United States recognizes the right of asylum for individuals as specified by international and federal law. A specified number of legally defined refugees who either apply for asylum from inside the U.S. or apply for refugee status from outside the U.S., are admitted annually. Refugees compose about one-tenth of the total annual immigration to the United States, though some large refugee populations are very prominent. Since World War II, more refugees have found homes in the U.S. than any other nation
 and more than two million refugees have arrived in the U.S. since 1980.
 In the years 2005 through 2007, the number of asylum seekers accepted 
into the U.S. was about 40,000 per year. This compared with about 30,000
 per year in the UK and 25,000 in Canada. The U.S. accounted for about 
10% of all asylum-seeker acceptances in the OECD countries in 1998-2007. The United States is by far the most populous OECD country and receives fewer than the average number of refugees per capita: In 2010-14 (before the massive migrant surge in Europe in 2015) it ranked 28 of 43 industrialized countries reviewed by UNHCR.
Asylum has two basic requirements. First, an asylum applicant 
must establish that he or she fears persecution in their home country. Second, the applicant must prove that he or she would be persecuted on account of one of five protected grounds: race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or particular social group.
Character of refugee inflows and resettlement
 
  
Refugee resettlement to the United States by region, 1990–2005 (Source: Migration Policy Institute)
During the Cold War, and up until the mid-1990s, the majority of refugees resettled in the U.S. were people from the former-Soviet Union and Southeast Asia. The most conspicuous of the latter were the refugees from Vietnam following the Vietnam War, sometimes known as "boat people". Following the end of the Cold War, the largest resettled European group were refugees from the Balkans, primarily Serbs, from Bosnia and Croatia. In the 1990s/2000s, the proportion of Africans rose in the annual resettled population, as many fled various ongoing conflicts.
Large metropolitan areas have been the destination of most 
resettlements, with 72% of all resettlements between 1983 and 2004 going
 to 30 locations. The historical gateways for resettled refugees have been California (specifically Los Angeles, Orange County, San Jose, and Sacramento), the Mid-Atlantic region (New York in particular), the Midwest (specifically Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis-St. Paul), and Northeast (Providence, Rhode Island). In the last decades of the twentieth century, Washington, D.C.; Seattle, Washington; Portland, Oregon; and Atlanta, Georgia
 provided new gateways for resettled refugees. Particular cities are 
also identified with some national groups: metropolitan Los Angeles 
received almost half of the resettled refugees from Iran, 20% of Iraqi refugees went to Detroit, and nearly one-third of refugees from the former Soviet Union were resettled in New York.
Between 2004 and 2007, nearly 4,000 Venezuelans claimed political
 asylum in the United States and almost 50% of them were granted. In 
contrast, in 1996, only 328 Venezuelans claimed asylum, and a mere 20% 
of them were granted. According to USA Today, the number of asylums being granted to Venezuelan claimants has risen from 393 in 2009 to 969 in 2012.
 Other references agree with the high number of political asylum 
claimants from Venezuela, confirming that between 2000 and 2010, the 
United States has granted them with 4,500 political asylums.
Criticism
Despite
 this, concerns have been raised with the U.S. asylum and refugee 
determination processes. A recent empirical analysis by three legal 
scholars described the U.S. asylum process as a game of refugee roulette;
 that is to say that the outcome of asylum determinations depends in 
large part on the personality of the particular adjudicator to whom an 
application is randomly assigned, rather than on the merits of the case.
 The very low numbers of Iraqi refugees accepted between 2003 and 2007 
exemplifies concerns about the United States' refugee processes. The 
Foreign Policy Association reported that "Perhaps the most perplexing 
component of the Iraq refugee crisis... has been the inability for the 
U.S. to absorb more Iraqis following the 2003 invasion of the country. 
Up until 2008, the U.S. has granted less than 800 Iraqis refugee status,
 just 133 in 2007. By contrast, the U.S. granted asylum to more than 
100,000 Vietnamese refugees during the Vietnam War." 
Relevant law and procedures
"The Immigration and Nationality Act ('INA') authorizes the Attorney General to grant asylum if an alien
 is unable or unwilling to return to her country of origin because she 
has suffered past persecution or has a well-founded fear of future 
persecution on account of 'race, religion, nationality, membership in a 
particular social group, or political opinion.'"
The United States is obliged to recognize valid claims for asylum under the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
 and its 1967 Protocol. As defined by these agreements, a refugee is a 
person who is outside their country of nationality (or place of habitual residence if stateless) who, owing to a fear of persecution
 on account of a protected ground, is unable or unwilling to avail 
himself of the protection of the state. Protected grounds include race, 
nationality, religion, political opinion and membership of a particular social group. The signatories to these agreements are further obliged not to return or "refoul" refugees to the place where they would face persecution.
This commitment was codified and expanded with the passing of the Refugee Act of 1980 by the United States Congress.
 Besides reiterating the definitions of the 1951 Convention and its 
Protocol, the Refugee Act provided for the establishment of an Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
 (HHS) to help refugees begin their lives in the U.S. The structure and 
procedures evolved and by 2004, federal handling of refugee affairs was 
led by the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM) of the U.S. Department of State, working with the ORR at HHS. Asylum claims are mainly the responsibility of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Refugee quotas
Each year, the President of the United States
 sends a proposal to the Congress for the maximum number of refugees to 
be admitted into the country for the upcoming fiscal year, as specified 
under section 207(e) (1)-(7) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
 This number, known as the "refugee ceiling", is the target of annual 
lobbying by both refugee advocates seeking to raise it and 
anti-immigration groups seeking to lower it. However, once proposed, the
 ceiling is normally accepted without substantial Congressional debate. 
The September 11, 2001 attacks resulted in a substantial disruption to the processing of resettlement claims with actual admissions falling to about 26,000 in fiscal year
 2002. Claims were doublechecked for any suspicious activity and 
procedures were put in place to detect any possible terrorist 
infiltration, though some advocates noted that, given the ease with 
which foreigners can otherwise legally enter the U.S., entry as a 
refugee is comparatively unlikely. The actual number of admitted 
refugees rose in subsequent years with refugee ceiling for 2006 at 
70,000. Critics note these levels are still among the lowest in 30 
years.
| Recent actual, projected and proposed refugee admissions | 
|---|
A total of 73,293 persons were admitted to the United States as 
refugees during 2010. The leading countries of nationality for refugee 
admissions were Iraq (24.6%), Burma (22.8%), Bhutan (16.9%), Somalia 
(6.7%), Cuba (6.6%), Iran (4.8%), DR Congo (4.3%), Eritrea (3.5%), 
Vietnam (1.2%) and Ethiopia (0.9%).
Application for resettlement by refugees abroad
The majority of applications for resettlement
 to the United States are made to U.S. embassies in foreign countries 
and are reviewed by employees of the State Department. In these cases, 
refugee status has normally already been reviewed by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and recognized by the host country. For these refugees, the U.S. has stated its preferred order of solutions are: (1) repatriation
 of refugees to their country of origin, (2) integration of the refugees
 into their country of asylum and, last, (3) resettlement to a third 
country, such as the U.S., when the first two options are not viable.
The United States prioritizes valid applications for resettlement into three levels.
Priority One
- persons facing compelling security concerns in countries of first asylum; persons in need of legal protection because of the danger of refoulement; those in danger due to threats of armed attack in an area where they are located; or persons who have experienced recent persecution because of their political, religious, or human rights activities (prisoners of conscience); women-at-risk; victims of torture or violence, physically or mentally disabled persons; persons in urgent need of medical treatment not available in the first asylum country; and persons for whom other durable solutions are not feasible and whose status in the place of asylum does not present a satisfactory long-term solution. – UNHCR Resettlement Handbook
Priority Two
is
 composed of groups designated by the U.S. government as being of 
special concern. These are often identified by an act proposed by a 
Congressional representative. Priority Two groups proposed for 2008 
included: 
- "Jews, Evangelical Christians, and Ukrainian Catholic and Orthodox religious activists in the former Soviet Union, with close family in the United States" (This is the amendment which was proposed by Senator Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J. and originally enacted November 21, 1989.)
- from Cuba: "human rights activists, members of persecuted religious minorities, former political prisoners, forced-labor conscripts (1965-68), persons deprived of their professional credentials or subjected to other disproportionately harsh or discriminatory treatment resulting from their perceived or actual political or religious beliefs or activities, and persons who have experienced or fear harm because of their relationship – family or social – to someone who falls under one of the preceding categories"
- from Vietnam: "the remaining active cases eligible under the former Orderly Departure Program (ODP) and Resettlement Opportunity for Vietnamese Returnees (ROVR) programs"; individuals who, through no fault of their own, were unable to access the ODP program before its cutoff date; and Amerasian citizens, who are counted as refugee admissions
- individuals who have fled Burma and who are registered in nine refugee camps along the Thai/Burma border and who are identified by UNHCR as in need of resettlement
- UNHCR-identified Burundian refugees who originally fled Burundi in 1972 and who have no possibility either to settle permanently in Tanzania or return to Burundi
- Bhutanese refugees in Nepal registered by UNHCR in the recent census and identified as in need of resettlement
- Iranian members of certain religious minorities
- Sudanese Darfurians living in a refugee camp in Anbar Governorate in Iraq would be eligible for processing if a suitable location can be identified
Priority Three
is reserved for cases of family reunification,
 in which a refugee abroad is brought to the United States to be 
reunited with a close family member who also has refugee status. A list 
of nationalities eligible for Priority Three consideration is developed 
annually. The proposed countries for FY2008 were Afghanistan, Burma, Burundi, Colombia, Congo (Brazzaville), Cuba, Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Eritrea, Ethiopia, Haiti, Iran, Iraq, Rwanda, Somalia, Sudan and Uzbekistan.
Individual application
The minority of applications that are made by individuals who have 
already entered the U.S. are judged on whether they meet the U.S. 
definition of "refugee" and on various other statutory criteria 
(including a number of bars that would prevent an otherwise-eligible 
refugee from receiving protection). There are two ways to apply for 
asylum while in the United States:
- If an asylum seeker has been placed in removal proceedings before an immigration judge with the Executive Office for Immigration Review, which is a part of the Department of Justice, the individual may apply for asylum with the Immigration Judge.
- If an asylum seeker is inside the United States and has not been placed in removal proceedings, he or she may file an application with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), regardless of their legal status in the United States. However, if the asylum seeker is not in valid immigration status and USCIS does not grant the asylum application, USCIS may place the applicant in removal proceedings, in that case a judge will consider the application anew. The immigration judge may also consider the applicant for relief that the asylum office has no jurisdiction to grant, such as withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture. Since the effective date of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act passed in 1996, an applicant must apply for asylum within one year of entry or be barred from doing so unless the applicant can establish changed circumstances that are material to their eligibility for asylum or exceptional circumstances related to the delay.
Immigrants who were picked up after entering the country between 
entry points can be released by Immigration and Customs Enforcement 
(ICE) on payment of a bond,
 and an immigration judge may lower or waive the bond. In contrast, 
refugees who asked for asylum at an official point of entry before 
entering the U.S. cannot be released on bond. Instead, ICE officials 
have full discretion to decide whether they can be released.
If an applicant is eligible for asylum, they have a procedural right to have the Attorney General
 make a discretionary determination as to whether the applicant should 
be admitted into the United States as an asylee. An applicant is also 
entitled to mandatory "withholding of removal" (or restriction on 
removal) if the applicant can prove that her life or freedom would be 
threatened upon return to her country of origin. The dispute in asylum 
cases litigated before the Executive Office for Immigration Review
 and, subsequently, the federal courts centers on whether the 
immigration courts properly rejected the applicant's claim that she is 
eligible for asylum or other relief. 
The applicant has the burden of proving that he (or she) is 
eligible for asylum. To satisfy this burden, an applicant must show that
 she has a well-founded fear of persecution in her home country on 
account of either race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or 
membership in a particular social group.
 The applicant can demonstrate her well-founded fear by demonstrating 
that she has a subjective fear (or apprehension) of future persecution 
in her home country that is objectively reasonable. An applicant's claim
 for asylum is stronger where she can show past persecution, in which 
case she will receive a presumption that she has a well-founded fear of 
persecution in her home country. The government can rebut this 
presumption by demonstrating either that the applicant can relocate to 
another area within her home country in order to avoid persecution, or 
that conditions in the applicant's home country have changed such that 
the applicant's fear of persecution there is no longer objectively 
reasonable. Technically, an asylum applicant who has suffered past 
persecution meets the statutory criteria to receive a grant of asylum 
even if the applicant does not fear future persecution. In practice, 
adjudicators will typically deny asylum status in the exercise of 
discretion in such cases, except where the past persecution was so 
severe as to warrant a humanitarian grant of asylum, or where the 
applicant would face other serious harm if returned to their country of 
origin. In addition, applicants who, according to the US Government, 
participated in the persecution of others are not eligible for asylum.
A person may face persecution in their home country because of 
race, nationality, religion, ethnicity, or social group, and yet not be 
eligible for asylum because of certain bars defined by law. The most 
frequent bar is the one-year filing deadline. If an application is not 
submitted within one year following the applicant's arrival in the 
United States, the applicant is barred from obtaining asylum unless 
certain exceptions apply. However, the applicant can be eligible for 
other forms of relief such as Withholding of Removal, which is a less 
favorable type of relief than asylum because it does not lead to a Green
 Card or citizenship. The deadline for submitting the application is not
 the only restriction that bars one from obtaining asylum. If an 
applicant persecuted others, committed a serious crime, or represents a 
risk to U.S. security, he or she will be barred from receiving asylum as
 well.
- After 2001, asylum officers and immigration judges became less likely to grant asylum to applicants, presumably because of the attacks on 11 September.
In 1986 an Immigration Judge agreed not to send Fidel Armando-Alfanso back to Cuba, based on his membership in a particular social group (gay people) who were persecuted and feared further persecution by the government of Cuba. The Board of Immigration Appeals upheld the decision in 1990, and in 1994, then-Attorney General Janet Reno
 ordered this decision to be a legal precedent binding on Immigration 
Judges and the Asylum Office, and established sexual orientation as a 
grounds for asylum. However, in 2002 the Board of Immigration Appeals
 “suggested in an ambiguous and internally inconsistent decision that 
the ‘protected characteristic’ and ‘social visibility’ tests may 
represent dual requirements in all social group cases.”
 The requirement for social visibility means that the government of a 
country from which the person seeking asylum is fleeing must recognize 
their social group, and that LGBT
 people who hide their sexual orientation, for example out of fear of 
persecution, may not be eligible for asylum under this mandate.
In 1996 Fauziya Kasinga,
 a 19-year-old woman from the Tchamba-Kunsuntu people of Togo, became 
the first person to be granted asylum in the United States to escape female genital mutilation. In August 2014, the Board of Immigration Appeals, the United States's highest immigration court, found for the first time that women who are victims of severe domestic violence in their home countries can be eligible for asylum in the United States. However, that ruling was in the case of a woman from Guatemala and was anticipated to only apply to women from there. On June 11, 2018, Attorney General Jeff Sessions reversed that precedent and announced that victims of domestic abuse or gang violence will no longer qualify for asylum.
INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca precedent
The term "well-founded fear" has no precise definition in asylum law. In INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 U.S. 421
 (1987), the Supreme Court avoided attaching a consistent definition to 
the term, preferring instead to allow the meaning to evolve through 
case-by-case determinations. However, in Cardoza-Fonseca, the 
Court did establish that a "well-founded" fear is something less than a 
"clear probability" that the applicant will suffer persecution. Three 
years earlier, in INS v. Stevic, 467 U.S. 407
 (1984), the Court held that the clear probability standard applies in 
proceedings seeking withholding of deportation (now officially referred 
to as 'withholding of removal' or 'restriction on removal'), because in 
such cases the Attorney General must allow the applicant to remain in 
the United States. With respect to asylum, because Congress employed 
different language in the asylum statute and incorporated the refugee 
definition from the international Convention relating to the Status of 
Refugees, the Court in Cardoza-Fonseca reasoned that the standard for showing a well-founded fear of persecution must necessarily be lower.
An applicant initially presents his claim to an asylum officer, 
who may either grant asylum or refer the application to an Immigration 
Judge. If the asylum officer refers the application and the applicant is
 not legally authorized to remain in the United States, the applicant is
 placed in removal proceedings. After a hearing, an immigration judge 
determines whether the applicant is eligible for asylum. The immigration
 judge's decision is subject to review on two, and possibly three, 
levels. First, the immigration judge's decision can be appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals.
 In 2002, in order to eliminate the backlog of appeals from immigration 
judges, the Attorney General streamlined review procedures at the Board of Immigration Appeals.
 One member of the Board can affirm a decision of an immigration judge 
without oral argument; traditional review by three-judge panels is 
restricted to limited categories for which "searching appellate review" 
is appropriate. If the BIA affirms the decision of the immigration 
court, then the next level of review is a petition for review in the United States court of appeals
 for the circuit in which the immigration judge sits. The court of 
appeals reviews the case to determine if "substantial evidence" supports
 the immigration judge's (or the BIA's) decision. As the Supreme Court held in INS v. Ventura, 537 U.S. 12 (2002), if the federal appeals court determines that substantial evidence does not
 support the immigration judge's decision, it must remand the case to 
the BIA for further proceedings instead of deciding the unresolved legal
 issue in the first instance. Finally, an applicant aggrieved by a 
decision of the federal appeals court can petition the U.S. Supreme Court to review the case by a discretionary writ of certiorari. But the Supreme Court has no duty to review an immigration case, and so many applicants for asylum forego this final step.
Notwithstanding his statutory eligibility, an applicant for asylum will be deemed ineligible if:
- the applicant participated in persecuting any other person on account of that other person's race, religion, national origin, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion;
- the applicant constitutes a danger to the community because he has been convicted in the United States of a particularly serious crime;
- the applicant has committed a serious non-political crime outside the United States prior to arrival;
- the applicant constitutes a danger to the security of the United States;
- the applicant is inadmissible on terrorism-related grounds;
- the applicant has been firmly resettled in another country prior to arriving in the United States; or
- the applicant has been convicted of an aggravated felony as defined more broadly in the immigration context.
Conversely, even if an applicant is eligible for asylum, the Attorney
 General may decline to extend that protection to the applicant. (The 
Attorney General does not have this discretion if the applicant has also
 been granted withholding of deportation.) Frequently the Attorney 
General will decline to extend an applicant the protection of asylum if 
he has abused or circumvented the legal procedures for entering the 
United States and making an asylum claim.
Work permit and permanent residence status
An in-country applicant for asylum is eligible for a work permit
 (employment authorization) only if their application for asylum has 
been pending for more than 150 days without decision by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
 (USCIS) or the Executive Office for Immigration Review. If an asylum 
seeker is recognized as a refugee, he or she may apply for lawful 
permanent residence status (a green card) one year after being granted 
asylum. Asylum seekers generally do not receive economic support. This, 
combined with a period where the asylum seeker is ineligible for a work 
permit is unique among developed countries and has been condemned from 
some organisations, including Human Rights Watch.
Up until 2004, recipients of asylee status faced a wait of 
approximately fourteen years to receive permanent resident status after 
receiving their initial status, because of an annual cap of 10,000 green
 cards for this class of individuals. However, in May 2005, under the 
terms of a proposed settlement of a class-action lawsuit, Ngwanyia v. Gonzales,
 brought on behalf of asylees against CIS, the government agreed to make
 available an additional 31,000 green cards for asylees during the 
period ending on September 30, 2007. This is in addition to the 10,000 
green cards allocated for each year until then and was meant to speed up
 the green card waiting time considerably for asylees. However, the 
issue was rendered somewhat moot by the enactment of the REAL ID Act of 2005
 (Division B of United States Public Law 109-13 (H.R. 1268)), which 
eliminated the cap on annual asylee green cards. Currently, an asylee 
who has continuously resided in the US for more than one year in that 
status has an immediately available visa number. 
On April 29, 2019, President Trump
 ordered new restrictions on asylum seekers at the Mexican border — 
including application fees and work permit restraints — and directed 
that cases in the already clogged immigration courts be settled within 
180 days.
Unaccompanied Refugee Minors Program
An Unaccompanied Refugee Minor
 (URM) is any person who has not attained 18 years of age who entered 
the United States unaccompanied by and not destined to: (a) a parent, 
(b) a close non-parental adult relative who is willing and able to care 
for said minor, or (c) an adult with a clear and court-verifiable claim 
to custody of the minor; and who has no parent(s) in the United States. These minors are eligible for entry into the URM program. Trafficking victims who have been certified by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the United States Department of Homeland Security, and/or the United States Department of State are also eligible for benefits and services under this program to the same extent as refugees. 
The URM program is coordinated by the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), a branch of the United States Administration for Children and Families.
 The mission of the URM program is to help people in need “develop 
appropriate skills to enter adulthood and to achieve social 
self-sufficiency.” To do this, URM provides refugee minors with the same
 social services available to U.S.-born children, including, but not 
limited to, housing, food, clothing, medical care, educational support, 
counseling, and support for social integration.
History of the URM Program
URM was established in 1980 as a result of the legislative branch's enactment of the Refugee Act that same year.
 Initially, it was developed to “address the needs of thousands of 
children in Southeast Asia” who were displaced due to civil unrest and 
economic problems resulting from the aftermath of the Vietnam War, which
 had ended only five years earlier.
 Coordinating with the United Nations and “utilizing an executive order 
to raise immigration quotas, President Carter doubled the number of 
Southeast Asian refugees allowed into the United States each month.” The URM was established, in part, to deal with the influx of refugee children. 
URM was established in 1980, but the emergence of refugee minors as an issue in the United States “dates back to at least WWII.”
 Since that time, oppressive regimes and U.S. military involvement have 
consistently “contributed to both the creation of a notable supply of 
unaccompanied refugee children eligible to relocate to the United 
States, as well as a growth in public pressure on the federal government
 to provide assistance to these children."
Since 1980, the demographic makeup of children within URM has 
shifted from being largely Southeast Asian to being much more diverse. 
Between 1999 and 2005, children from 36 different countries were 
inducted into the program.
 Over half of the children who entered the program within this same time
 period came from Sudan, and less than 10% came from Southeast Asia.
Perhaps the most commonly known group to enter the United States 
through the URM program was known as the “Lost Boys” of Sudan. Their 
story was made into a documentary by Megan Mylan and Jon Shenk. The film, Lost Boys of Sudan, follows two Sudanese refugees on their journey from Africa to America. It won an Independent Spirit Award and earned two national Emmy nominations.
Functionality
In terms of functionality, the URM program is considered a 
state-administered program. The U.S. federal government provides funds 
to certain states that administer the URM program, typically through a 
state refugee coordinator's office. The state refugee coordinator 
provides financial and programmatic oversight to the URM programs in 
their state. The state refugee coordinator ensures that unaccompanied 
minors in URM programs receive the same benefits and services as other 
children in out-of-home care in the state. The state refugee coordinator
 also oversees the needs of unaccompanied minors with many other 
stakeholders.
ORR contracts with two faith-based agencies to manage the URM program in the United States; Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (LIRS) and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
 (USCCB). These agencies identify eligible children in need of URM 
services; determine appropriate placements for children among their 
national networks of affiliated agencies; and conduct training, research
 and technical assistance on URM services. They also provide the social 
services such as: indirect financial support for housing, food, 
clothing, medical care and other necessities; intensive case management 
by social workers; independent living skills training; educational 
supports; English language training; career/college counseling and 
training; mental health services; assistance adjusting immigration 
status; cultural activities; recreational opportunities; support for 
social integration; and cultural and religious preservation.
The URM services provided through these contracts are not 
available in all areas of the United States. The 14 states that 
participate in the URM program include: Arizona, California, Colorado, 
Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, North Dakota, New York, 
Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington and the nation's 
capital, Washington D.C.
Adoption of URM Children
Although they are in the United States without the protection of 
their family, URM-designated children are not generally eligible for 
adoption. This is due in part to the Hague Convention on the Protection 
and Co-Operation in Respect of Inter-Country Adoption, otherwise known 
as the Hague Convention. Created in 1993, the Hague Convention established international standards for inter-country adoption. In order to protect against the abduction, sale or trafficking of children,
 these standards protect the rights of the biological parents of all 
children. Children in the URM program have become separated from their 
biological parents and the ability to find and gain parental release of 
URM children is often extremely difficult. Most children, therefore, are
 not adopted. They are served primarily through the foster care system 
of the participating states. Most will be in the custody of the state 
(typically living with a foster family) until they become adults. 
Reunification with the child's family is encouraged whenever possible.
U.S. government support after arrival
As
 soon as people seeking asylum in the United States are accepted as 
refugees they are eligible for public assistance just like any other 
person, including cash welfare, food assistance, and health coverage. 
Many refugees depend on public benefits, but over time may become 
self-sufficient.
Availability of public assistance programs can vary depending on 
which states within the United States refugees are allocated to resettle
 in. For example, health policies differ from state to state, and as of 
2017, only 33 states expanded Medicaid programs under the Affordable Care Act.
 In 2016, The American Journal of Public Health reported that only 60% 
of refugees are assigned to resettlement locations with expanding 
Medicaid programs, meaning that more than 1 in 3 refugees may have 
limited healthcare access.
In 2015, the world saw the greatest displacement of people since 
World War II with 65.3 million people having to flee their homes. In fiscal year 2016, the Department of State's Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration under the Migration and Refugee Assistance Act
 (MRA) requested that $442.7 million be allocated to refugee admission 
programs that relocate refugees into communities across the country.
 President Obama made a "Call to Action" for the private sector to make a
 commitment to help refugees by providing opportunities for jobs and 
accommodating refugee accessibility needs.
Child separation
The recent U.S. Government policy known as "Zero-tolerance" was implemented in April 2018. In response, a number of scientific organizations released statements on the negative impact of child separation, a form of childhood trauma, on child development, including the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association, and the Society for Research in Child Development.
Efforts are underway to minimize the impact of child separation. 
For instance, the National Child Traumatic Stress Network released a resource guide and held a webinar related to traumatic separation and refugee and immigrant trauma.
LGBTQ asylum seekers
Historically, homosexuality was considered a deviant behavior in the US, and the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 barred homosexual individuals from entering the United States due to concerns about their psychological health. One of the first successful LGBT
 asylum pleas to be granted refugee status in the United States due to 
sexual orientation was a Cuban national whose case was first presented 
in 1989.
 The case was affirmed by the Board of Immigration Appeals and the 
barring of LGBT and queer individuals into the United States was 
repealed in 1990. The case, known as Matter of Acosta (1985), set
 the standard of what qualified as a "particular social group." This new
 definition of "social group" expanded to explicitly include 
homosexuality and the LGBT population. It considers homosexuality and gender identity
 a "common characteristic of the group either cannot change or should 
not be required to change because it is fundamental to their individual 
identities or consciences."
 This allows political asylum to some LGBT individuals who face 
potential criminal penalties due to homosexuality and sodomy being 
illegal in the home country who are unable to seek protection from the 
state.
 The definition was intended to be open-ended in order to fit with the 
changing understanding of sexuality. According to Fatma Marouf, the 
definition established in Acosta was influential internationally, appealing to "the fundamental norms of human rights."
Experts disagree on the role of sexuality in the asylum process. 
Stefan Volger argues that the definition of social group tends to be 
relatively flexible, and describes sexuality akin to religion—one might 
change religions but characteristics of religion are protected traits 
that can't be forced.
 However, Susan Berger argues that while homosexuality and other sexual 
minorities might be protected under the law, the burden of proving that 
they are an LGBT member demonstrates a greater immutable view of the 
expected LGBT performance.
 The importance of visibility is stressed throughout the asylum process,
 as sexuality is an internal characteristic. It is not visibly 
represented in the outside appearance.
When considering how sexuality is viewed, research utilize asylum
 claim decisions and individual cases to understand what is considered 
characteristic of being a member of the LGBT community. In migration 
studies, there was an implicit assumption that immigrants are 
heterosexual and LGBT people are citizens.
One theory that took route within the queer migrations studies was Jasbir Puar's idea of homonationalism.
 According to Paur, following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack, 
the movement against terrorists also resulted in a reinforcement of the 
binary "us vs. them" against some members of the LGBT community. The 
social landscape was termed "homonormative nationalism" or 
homonationalism.
According to Amanda M. Gómez, sexual orientation identity is formed and performed in the asylum process.
 Unlike race or gender, in sexual orientation asylum claims, applicants 
have to prove their sexuality to convince asylum officials that they are
 truly part of their social group.
 Rachel Lewis and Nancy Naples argue that LGBT people may not seem 
credible if they do not fit Western stereotypes of what LGBT people look
 like. The expectation is that lesbians will present in masculine ways, while gay men will present in feminine ways.
 Eithne Luibhéid recognizes this presentation issue as connecting to the
 mainstream narrative that same-sex attraction comes from a problem of 
women being trapped in the men's body and vice-versa.
 Dress, mannerisms, and style of speech, as well as not having had 
public romantic relationships with the opposite sex, may be perceived by
 the immigration judge as not reflective of the applicants’ sexual 
orientation.
 Scholars and legal experts have long argued that asylum law has created
 legal definitions for homosexuality that are essentialist and damaging 
for our understanding of queerness.
Obstacles asylum seekers face
Gender
Female
 asylum seekers may encounter issues when seeking asylum in the United 
States due to what some see as a structural preference for male 
narrative forms in the requirements for acceptance.
 Researchers, such as Amy Shuman and Carol Bohmer, argue that the asylum
 process produces gendered cultural silences, particular in hearings 
where the majority of narrative construction takes place. Cultural silences refers to things that women refrain from sharing, due to shame, humiliation, and other deterrents.
 These deterrents can make achieving asylum more difficult as it can 
keep relevant information from being shared with the asylum judge.
Susan Berger argues that the relationship between gender and 
sexuality leads to arbitrary case decisions, as there are no clear 
guidelines for when the private problems becomes an international 
problem. Berger uses case specific examples of asylum applications where
 gender and sexuality both act as an immutable characteristic. She 
argues that because male persecutors of lesbian and heterosexual female 
applicants tend to be family members, their harm occurs in the private 
domain and is therefore excluded from asylum consideration. Male 
applicants, on the other hand, are more likely to experience targeted, 
public persecution that relates better to the traditional idea of a 
homosexual asylum seeker. Male applicants are encouraged to perform gay 
stereotypes to strengthen their asylum application on the basis of 
sexual orientation, while lesbian women face the same difficulties as 
their heterosexual partners to perform the homosexual narrative.
 Joe Rollins found that gay male applicants were more likely to be 
granted refugee status if they included rape in their narratives, while 
gay Asian immigrants were less likely to be granted refugee status over 
all, even with the inclusion of rape. This, he claimed, was due to Asian men being subconsciously feminized.
These experiences are articulated during the hearing process where the responsibility to prove membership is on the applicant.
 During the hearing process, applicants are encouraged to demonstrate 
persecution for gender or sexuality and place the source as their own 
culture. Shuman and Bohmer argue that in sexual minorities, it is not 
enough to demonstrate only violence, asylum applicants have to align 
themselves against a restrictive culture. The narratives are forced to 
fit into categories shaped by western culture or be found to be 
fraudulent.
According to Shuman and Bohmer, due to women's social position in
 most countries, lesbians are more likely to stay in the closet, which 
often means that they do not have the public visibility element that the
 asylum process requires for credibility.
 This leads to Lewis and Naples’ critique to the fact that asylum 
officials often assume that since women do not live such public lives as
 men do, that they would be safe from abuse or persecution, in 
comparison to gay men who are often part of the public sphere.
 This argument violates the basic concept that one's sexual orientation 
is a fundamental right and that family and the private sphere are often 
the first spaces where lesbians experience violence and discrimination.
 Because lesbians live such hidden lives, they tend to lack police 
reports, hospital records, and letters of support from witnesses, which 
decreases their chances of being considered credible and raises the 
stakes of effectively telling their stories in front of asylum 
officials.
Mexican Transgender Asylum Seeker
LGBT
 individuals have a higher risk for mental health problems when compared
 to cis-gender counterparts and many transgender individuals face 
socioeconomic difficulties in addition to being an asylum seeker. In a 
study conducted by Mary Gowin, E. Laurette Taylor, Jamie Dunnington, 
Ghadah Alshuwaiyer, and Marshall K. Cheney of Mexican Transgender Asylum
 Seekers, they found 5 major stressors among the participants including 
assault (verbal, physical and sexual), "unstable environments, fear for 
safety and security, hiding undocumented status, and economic 
insecurity."
 They also found that all of the asylum seekers who participated 
reported at least one health issue that could be attributed to the 
stressors. They accessed little or no use of health or social services, 
attributed to barriers to access, such as fear of the government, 
language barriers and transportation.
 They are also more likely to report lower levels of education due to 
few opportunities after entering the United States. Many of the asylum 
seeker participants entered the United States as undocumented 
immigrants. Obstacles to legal services included fear and knowledge that
 there were legal resources to gaining asylum.
Human Rights Activism
Human
 Rights and LGBT advocates have worked to create many improvements to 
the LGBT Asylum Seekers coming into the United States.
 A 2015 report issued by the LGBT Freedom and Asylum network identifies 
best practices for supporting LGBT asylum seekers in the US. The US State Department has also issued a factsheet on protecting LGBT refugees.
Film
The 2000 documentary film Well-Founded Fear, from filmmakers Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini marked the first time that a film crew was privy to the private proceedings at the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Services (INS),
 where individual asylum officers ponder the often life-or-death fate of
 the majority of immigrants seeking asylum. The film analyzes the US 
asylum application process by following several asylum applicants and 
asylum officers.


