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Immigration Policy and Immigrant Rights Organizations


Business Immigration Groups

Coalition for Comprehensive Immigration Reform

Compete America

Essential Worker Immigration Coalition

Immigration Voice

National Immigration Groups

Asian American Justice Center - Immigrant Rights

ACLU - Immigrants' Rights

American-Arab Anti Discrimination Committee

American Friends Service Committee - Immigrants' Rights

Anti-Defamation League - Immigration Reports and Resources

Brennan Center for Justice - NYU School of Law

Catholic Legal Immigration Network

civilrights.org - Immigration

Farmworker Justice - Immigration

Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society

Immigrant Children's Advocacy Project

Immigrant Legal Resource Center

Immigration Advocates Network

Immigration Equality

Immigrant Solidarity Network

International Relations Center - Americas Program

Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform

Justice for Immigrants

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service

Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund

National Council of La Raza

National Immigrant Justice Center

National Immigration Forum

National Immigration Law Center

National Immigration Project

National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights

Unite Families

Vera's Center on Immigration and Justice

State and/or Regional Immigration Groups

Alabama

Southern Poverty Law Center

Arizona

Border Action Network

Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project

Humane Borders

California

Bay Area Immigrant Rights Coalition

California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation

California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation's Border Project

Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles

Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles - Immigration

Colorado

Rocky Mountain Immigration Advocacy Network

Connecticut

Connecticut Center for a New Economy

D.C.

Capital Area Immigrants' Rights Coalition

Florida

Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center

Illinois

Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights

Iowa

Immigrant Rights Network of Iowa and Nebraska

Massachusetts

Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocate Coalition

Student Immigration Movement

Minnesota

Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota

Minnesota Advocates for Human Rights - Refugee and Immigrant Program

Minnesota Council of Churches - Refugee Services

Minnesota Department of Health - Refugee Health Program

The Minneapolis Foundation - Immigration in Minnesota

Twin Cities Immigrant Orientation Resources

Nebraska

Immigrant Rights Network of Iowa and Nebraska

New Mexico

Somos Un Pueblo Unido

New York

New Immigrant Community Empowerment

New York Association for New Americans

New York Immigration Coalition

North Carolina

Legal Services of Southern Piedmont

Oregon

Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization

Northwest Treeplanters and Farmworkers United

Oregon's Immigrant Rights Coalition

Pennsylvania

Golden Vision Foundation

Pennsylvania Immigrant Resource Center

South Carolina

Coalition for New South Carolinians

Tennessee

Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition

Texas

American Gateways (formerly the Political Asylum Project of Austin)

Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition

Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, Inc. (RAICES)

South Texas Pro Bono Asylum Representation Project (ProBAR)

Texans for Sensible Immigration Policy

The Equal Justice Center

Department of Justice - List of Free Legal Service Providers

Women on the Border

Workers Defense Project

Virgina

Virginia Justice Center for Farm and Immigrant Workers

Washington

Northwest Immigrant Rights Project

What's New

Protect Yourself and Your Family: Get Immigration Help from a Licensed Professional (PDF)

"Notarios," Visa Consultants, and Immigration Consultants Are Not Attorneys (PDF) 

U.S. makes case against Alabama's immigration law

November 16, 2011 - CNN - Alabama's immigration law is unconstitutional and aims to threaten "the most basic human needs," the U.S. Department of Justice said in a court filing.

The crisis in the immigration courts

October 24, 2011 - American Judicature Society - The glaring deficiencies in our immigration court system have lingered for far too long. The cornerstone American principle of fair justice, including timely and meaningful access to justice, is neglected in this system. We must elevate this principle back to its proper place. President Obama recently took a step forward by demanding the implementation of prosecutorial discretion within the system. The responsible federal actors must execute that demand. Additionally, further steps are needed to address more comprehensively the shortcomings of the immigration court system.

New U.S. Deportation Policy Spares Some (link to audio)

August 25, 2011 - Morning Edition - Immigrants and their lawyers are beginning to see the effects of the White House policy announced last week that downgrades some deportation cases.

The Department of Homeland Security says it hasn't officially begun to prioritize all 300,000 cases before the nation's immigration courts, but prosecutors are definitely employing newfound discretion.

U.S. Issues New Deportation Policy's First Reprieves

August 22, 2011 - New York Times - A working group from the Homeland Security and Justice Departments met Friday to initiate a review of about 300,000 deportation cases currently before the immigration courts. Under the policy, immigration authorities will use powers of prosecutorial discretion in existing law to suspend the deportations of most immigrants who, although they have committed immigration violations (which generally are civil offenses), have not been convicted of crimes.

In particular, officials will look to halt deportations of longtime residents with clean police records who came here illegally when they were children, or are close family of military service members, or are parents or spouses of American citizens.

Secretary Napolitano Announces the Extension of Temporary Protected Status for Haiti Beneficiaries

May 17, 2011 - Department of Homeland Security Press Release - Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano today announced the extension of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti beneficiaries. This extension will be effective July 23, 2011 and is for an additional 18 months. It will allow these TPS beneficiaries to remain in the United States through Jan. 22, 2013. The designation of TPS for eligible Haitian nationals who had continuously resided in the United States since Jan. 12, 2010 was originally announced by Secretary Napolitano on Jan. 15, 2010 and became effective on Jan. 21, 2010. Currently, approximately 48,000 Haitian nationals with TPS reside in the United States.

Mexican Actress Gets 30 Days in Marriage Case

April 25, 2011 - Associated Press - A Mexican soap opera star accused of entering a sham marriage to stay in the United States was sentenced Monday to 30 days in jail after admitting she lied during an immigration proceeding.

From Eritrea to U.S.: Complex migration routes worry U.S. officials

April 24, 2011 - Washington Post - Tekle estimated his family spent $24,000 for bribes, smugglers and his living expenses during the nearly year and a half he was in transit.

Obama rules out back-door legalization of immigrants

March 28, 2011 - Washington Times - President Obama said Monday that he does not have the power to suspend deportations, putting the nail in a plan some administration officials had explored that could have granted de-facto legal status to hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants.

Abused and Deported: Immigrant Women Face Double Disgrace

March 17, 2011 - New America Media - María Bolaños has been fighting her deportation for more than a year, since a fight with her husband when she called the police to report that she was a victim of domestic violence. The police arrived at her home and, suspecting her of illegally selling phone cards, ordered her arrest.

Immigration Audit Takes Toll

March 15, 2011 - Wall Street Journal - Harvard Maintenance Inc., a national janitorial company, will lose over half its Minnesota work force after an immigration audit, making it the second major business in that state to be hit by an Obama administration crackdown on employers of illegal immigrants.

The audit by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will result in about 240 workers losing their jobs, the Service Employees International Union said on Monday.

Tax Preparer Led Clients Down Road to Deportation

March 14, 2011 - San Francisco Chronicle - Ramon Rodriguez promised his clients, immigrants from Mexico who spoke little English, that he would win them legal residence if they paid him a few thousand dollars and let him handle the paperwork. All that most of them got was deportation orders.

A state appeals court upheld the former Santa Rosa tax preparer's grand theft convictions and four-year prison sentence last week. The court also ordered Rodriguez to repay $22,000 to his former clients, who may have a hard time collecting if they're deported.

State Legislatures Slow on Immigration Measures

March 13, 2011 - New  York Times - Under newly fortified Republican control, many state governments started the year pledging forceful action to crack down on illegal immigration, saying they would fill a void left by the stalemate in Washington over the issue.