AILA Prepares Sensible New Report on Asylum for the U.S. Government to Ignore

The American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) surveyed more than 300 immigration lawyers (including yours truly) about asylum and has issued a new report with findings and recommendations: High-Stakes Asylum: How Long an Asylum Case Takes and How We Can Do Better.

The report makes some useful suggestions for improving the system, and it is well worth a look. It also has some significant flaws (at least in my opinion). As I see it, though, the biggest problem–as usual for these types of things–is how to prevent the U.S. government from simply ignoring the report and continuing on its merry way. (more…)

Winning Old Asylum Cases

As you probably know, asylum applicants often wait years for their interview or court hearing. Some cases get stronger with time, but most do not. Sometimes, country conditions improve or change in a way that makes it more difficult to win asylum. Other times, the asylum laws or regulations change in a way that is unfavorable. More commonly, the very fact that an applicant has been away from her home country for a long time makes it seem less likely that she will be harmed if she returns. The Immigration Judge or Asylum Officer will want to know why anyone back home would still remember you, let alone want to harm you, after so much time outside the country.

If you’ve been waiting for a long time for your Asylum Office interview or Immigration Court hearing, and you think your case has become weaker, what can you do? (more…)

LGBT Asylum and LGBT Rights

This Pride Month feels different than in years past. After decades where it felt like the moral arc of the universe was bending towards Justice and tolerance, gay and trans rights–and gay and trans people–are under assault by right-leaning politicians, media personalities, and members of the community. Hard-won progress now seems under threat. Republicans are using a time-tested strategy of falsely imputing power to a vulnerable community (for example, the power to “groom” children) and then attacking that community based on the false narrative. It reminds me very much of blood libels, where Jews were falsely accused of murdering Christian children, and this became an excuse for violence against the Jewish community.

But while sexual minorities are under threat, particularly at the state and local levels, LGBT asylum cases continue to be approved by the federal Immigration Courts. What explains this discontinuity? And should we feel hopeful for society that LGBT asylum seekers are still being accepted, or fearful that the retrenchment of rights will spread to the asylum system? (more…)