The US immigration system is broken…
When an immigrant does not have legal representation, US immigration courts deny 90% of cases
It isn’t an accident. The system is set up this way.
“No one leaves home unless home is the mouth of a shark.”
- Warsan Shire, Writer, Poet, Editor, and Teacher
Throughout the immigration process, immigrants face…
Complex legal procedures and policies make it nearly impossible for someone to navigate the system on their own
Language barriers resulting in confusion, miscommunication, late applications, missed appointments, and fear
Transportation barriers, such as having cases sent to immigration courts hours away and no easy way for immigrants to get to their appointments
Financial barriers preventing immigrants from working without being penalized while they have to wait sometimes years before their application is heard
And this runs deeper than just the legal system.
In our schools, information about children is shared with ICE, resulting in constant fear and families being torn apart
In our communities, immigrants are forced to bear the brunt of economic recessions, and most recently, the COVID-19 pandemic, without access to relief benefits
On our streets, where the ever expanding use of surveillance technology has been used to track people with black and brown skin
And in our work, where far too often multilingualism is undervalued and services are rarely provided in any language other than English
But, there’s hope…
With representation, asylum seekers are 5x more likely to win their cases
Legal representation provides a pathway for asylum seekers to tell their stories
With an understanding of the immigration system, legal representatives can balance the scales of justice and advocate for accountability, transparency, and justice.
And there have been victories achieved by immigrant-led, grassroots organizing
From DACA to moratoriums on surveillance technology to bans on schools sharing information on children with ICE, there have been and will continue to be successes resulting from organizing. Many other organizations have led this fight and we’re prepared to support them.
How do we address this broken system?
We develop collaborative partnerships with colleges and universities to train undergraduate students to provide free legal representation to asylum seekers and to organize for immigrant justice. With every student we train, we’re building towards a future without xenophobia and where no one must face the immigration process alone.