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This information is from the
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Web
site. Please check there for any updates.
Contact our office if you have questions.
A
Acquired
Citizenship - Citizenship conferred at
birth on children born abroad to a U.S. citizen
parent(s).
Adoption
- See
Orphan.
Adjustment to
Immigrant Status - Procedure allowing
certain aliens already in the United States to
apply for immigrant status. Aliens admitted to
the United States in a nonimmigrant, refugee, or
parolee category may have their status changed
to that of lawful permanent resident if they are
eligible to receive an immigrant visa and one is
immediately available. In such cases, the alien
is counted as an immigrant as of the date of
adjustment, even though the alien may have been
in the United States for an extended period of
time. Beginning in October 1994, section 245(i)
of the INA allowed illegal residents who were
eligible for immigrant status to remain in the
United States and adjust to permanent resident
status by applying at a USCIS office and paying
an additional penalty fee. Section 245(i) is no
longer available unless the alien is the
beneficiary of a petition under section 204 of
the Act or of an application for a labor
certification under section 212(a)(5)(A), filed
on or before April 30, 2001. And, if filed after
January 1, 1998, the alien must have been
present in the United States on December 21,
2000. Prior to October 1994, most illegal
residents were required to leave the United
States and acquire a visa abroad from the
Department of State as they are again now.
Agricultural
Worker - As a nonimmigrant class of
admission, an alien coming temporarily to the
United States to perform agricultural labor or
services, as defined by the Secretary of Labor.
Alien -
Any person not a citizen or national of the
United States.
Amerasian Act
- Public Law 97-359 (Act of 10/22/82) provides
for the immigration to the United States of
certain Amerasian children. In order to qualify
for benefits under this law, an alien must have
been born in Cambodia, Korea, Laos, Thailand, or
Vietnam after December 31, 1950, and before
October 22, 1982, and have been fathered by a
U.S. citizen.
Amerasian
(Vietnam) - Immigrant visas are issued to
Amerasians under Public Law 100-202 (Act of
12/22/87), which provides for the admission of
aliens born in Vietnam after January 1, 1962,
and before January 1, 1976, if the alien was
fathered by a U.S. citizen. Spouses, children,
and parents or guardians may accompany the
alien.
Application
Support Centers - USCIS Offices
fingerprint applicants for immigration benefits.
Some USCIS applications, such as the Application
for Naturalization or the Application to
Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status,
require the USCIS to conduct a FBI fingerprint
background check on the applicant. Most
applicants that require a background check will
be scheduled to appear at a specific Application
Support Center (ASC) or Designated Law
Enforcement Agency (DLEA) for fingerprinting.
Apprehension
- The arrest of a removable alien by U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Each
apprehension of the same alien in a fiscal year
is counted separately.
Asylee -
An alien in the United States or at a port of
entry who is found to be unable or unwilling to
return to his or her country of nationality, or
to seek the protection of that country because
of persecution or a well-founded fear of
persecution. Persecution or the fear thereof
must be based on the alien’s race, religion,
nationality, membership in a particular social
group, or political opinion. For persons with no
nationality, the country of nationality is
considered to be the country in which the alien
last habitually resided. Asylees are eligible to
adjust to lawful permanent resident status after
one year of continuous presence in the United
States. These immigrants are limited to 10,000
adjustments per fiscal year.
B
Beneficiaries
- Aliens on whose behalf a U.S. citizen, legal
permanent resident, or employer have filed a
petition for such aliens to receive immigration
benefits from the U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services. Beneficiaries generally
receive a lawful status as a result of their
relationship to a U.S. citizen, lawful permanent
resident, or U.S. employer.
Border Crosser
- An alien resident of the United States
reentering the country after an absence of less
than six months in Canada or Mexico, or a
nonresident alien entering the United States
across the Canadian border for stays of no more
than six months or across the Mexican border for
stays of no more than 72 hours.
Business
Nonimmigrant - An alien coming
temporarily to the United States to engage in
commercial transactions which do not involve
gainful employment in the United States, i.e.,
engaged in international commerce on behalf of a
foreign firm, not employed in the U.S. labor
market, and receives no salary from U.S.
sources.
C
Cancellation of
Removal - A discretionary benefit
adjusting an alien’s status from that of
deportable alien to one lawfully admitted for
permanent residence. Application for
cancellation of removal is made during the
course of a hearing before an immigration judge.
Certificate of
Citizenship - Identity document proving
U.S. citizenship. Certificates of citizenship
are issued to derivative citizens and to persons
who acquired U.S. citizenship (see definitions
for Acquired and Derivative Citizenship).
Child -
Generally, an unmarried person under 21 years of
age who is: a child born in wedlock; a
stepchild, provided that the child was under 18
years of age at the time that the marriage
creating the stepchild relationship occurred; a
legitimated child, provided that the child was
legitimated while in the legal custody of the
legitimating parent; a child born out of
wedlock, when a benefit is sought on the basis
of its relationship with its mother, or to its
father if the father has or had a bona fide
relationship with the child; a child adopted
while under 16 years of age who has resided
since adoption in the legal custody of the
adopting parents for at least 2 years; or an
orphan, under 16 years of age, who has been
adopted abroad by a U.S. citizen or has an
immediate-relative visa petition submitted in
his/her behalf and is coming to the United
States for adoption by a U.S. citizen.
Civil Surgeon
– A medically trained, licensed and experienced
doctor practicing in the U.S. who is certified
by USCIS (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Service). These medical professionals receive
U.S. immigration-focused training in order to
provide examinations as required by the CDC
(Center for Disease Control and Prevention) and
USCIS. For medical examinations given overseas,
please see Panel Physician.
IMPORTANT: medical examinations will not be
recognized if they are given by a doctor in the
U.S. who is not a Civil Surgeon; please make
sure that your appointment is with a
Civil Surgeon
or your results and documents will be invalid.
Conditional
Resident - Any alien granted permanent
resident status on a conditional basis (e.g., a
spouse of a U.S. citizen; an immigrant
investor), who is required to petition for the
removal of the set conditions before the second
anniversary of the approval of his or her
conditional status.
Country of -
Birth:
The country in which a person is born.
Chargeability:
The independent country to which an immigrant
entering under the preference system is
accredited for purposes of numerical
limitations.
Citizenship:
The country in which a person is born (and has
not renounced or lost citizenship) or
naturalized and to which that person owes
allegiance and by which he or she is entitled to
be protected.
Former
Allegiance: The previous country of
citizenship of a naturalized U.S. citizen or of
a person who derived U.S. citizenship.
(Last)
Residence: The country in which an alien
habitually resided prior to entering the United
States.
Nationality:
The country of a person’s citizenship or country
in which the person is deemed a national.
Crewman -
A foreign national serving in a capacity
required for normal operations and service on
board a vessel or aircraft. Crewmen are admitted
for twenty-nine days, with no extensions. Two
categories of crewmen are defined in the INA:
D1, departing from the United States with the
vessel or aircraft on which he arrived or some
other vessel or aircraft; and D2, departing from
Guam with the vessel on which he arrived.
Cuban/Haitian
Entrant - Status accorded 1) Cubans who
entered illegally or were paroled into the
United States between April 15, 1980, and
October 10, 1980, and 2) Haitians who entered
illegally or were paroled into the country
before January 1, 1981. Cubans and Haitians
meeting these criteria who have continuously
resided in the United States since before
January 1, 1982, and who were known to
Immigration before that date, may adjust to
permanent residence under a provision of the
Immigration Control and Reform Act of 1986.
D
Deferred
Inspection - See
Parolee.
Departure Under
Safeguards - The departure of an illegal
alien from the United States which is physically
observed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) official.
Deportable Alien
- An alien in and admitted to the United States
subject to any grounds of removal specified in
the Immigration and Nationality Act. This
includes any alien illegally in the United
States, regardless of whether the alien entered
the country by fraud or misrepresentation or
entered legally but subsequently violated the
terms of his or her nonimmigrant classification
or status.
Deportation
- The formal removal of an alien from the United
States when the alien has been found removable
for violating the immigration laws. Deportation
is ordered by an immigration judge without any
punishment being imposed or contemplated. Prior
to April 1997 deportation and exclusion were
separate removal procedures. The Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility
Act of 1996 consolidated these procedures. After
April 1, 1997, aliens in and admitted to the
United States may be subject to removal based on
deportability. Now called Removal, this function
is managed by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement.
Derivative
Citizenship - Citizenship conveyed to
children through the naturalization of parents
or, under certain circumstances, to foreign-born
children adopted by U.S. citizen parents,
provided certain conditions are met.
District
- Geographic areas into which the United States
and its territories are divided for the
Immigration and Naturalization Service’s field
operations or one of three overseas offices
located in Rome, Bangkok, and Mexico City. Each
District Office, headed by a District Director,
has a specified service area that may include
part of a state, an entire state, or many
states. District Offices are where most USCIS
field staff are located. District Offices are
responsible for providing certain immigration
services and benefits to people resident in
their service area, and for enforcing
immigration laws in that jurisdiction. Certain
applications are filed directly with District
Offices, many kinds of interviews are conducted
at these Offices, and USCIS staff is available
to answer questions, provide forms, etc.
Diversity
- A category of immigrants replacing the earlier
categories for nationals of underrepresented
countries and countries adversely "affected" by
the Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments
of 1965 (P.L. 89-236). The annual limit on
diversity immigration was 40,000 during fiscal
years 1992-94, under a transitional diversity
program, and 55,000 beginning in fiscal year
1995, under a permanent diversity program.
Docket Control
- The USCIS mechanism for tracking the case
status of potentially removable aliens.
G
General
Naturalization Provisions - The basic
requirements for naturalization that every
applicant must meet, unless a member of a
special class. General provisions require an
applicant to be at least 18 years of age and a
lawful permanent resident with five years of
continuous residence in the United States, have
been physically present in the country for half
that period, and establish good moral character
for at least that period.
Geographic Area
of Chargeability - Any one of five
regions--Africa, East Asia, Latin America and
the Caribbean, Near East and South Asia, and the
former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe--into
which the world is divided for the initial
admission of refugees to the United States.
Annual consultations between the Executive
Branch and the Congress determine the ceiling on
the number of refugees who can be admitted to
the United States from each area. Beginning in
fiscal year 1987, an unallocated reserve was
incorporated into the admission ceilings.
H
Hemispheric
Ceilings - Statutory limits on
immigration to the United States in effect from
1968 to October 1978. Mandated by the
Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments of
1965, the ceiling on immigration from the
Eastern Hemisphere was set at 170,000, with a
per-country limit of 20,000. Immigration from
the Western Hemisphere was held to 120,000,
without a per-country limit until January 1,
1977. The Western Hemisphere was then made
subject to a 20,000 per country limit. Effective
October 1978, the separate hemisphere limits
were abolished in favor of a worldwide limit.
I
Immediate
Relatives - Certain immigrants who
because of their close relationship to U.S.
citizens are exempt from the numerical
limitations imposed on immigration to the United
States. Immediate relatives are: spouses of
citizens, children (under 21 years of age and
unmarried) of citizens, and parents of citizens
21 years of age or older.
Immigrant
- See
Permanent Resident
Alien.
Immigration Act
of 1990 - Public Law 101-649 (Act of
November 29, 1990), which increased the limits
on legal immigration to the United States,
revised all grounds for exclusion and
deportation, authorized temporary protected
status to aliens of designated countries,
revised and established new nonimmigrant
admission categories, revised and extended the
Visa Waiver Pilot Program, and revised
naturalization authority and requirements.
Immigration Judge - An attorney appointed
by the Attorney General to act as an
administrative judge within the Executive Office
for Immigration Review. They are qualified to
conduct specified classes of proceedings,
including removal proceedings.
INA - See Immigration and Nationality
Act.
Immigration and Nationality Act - The Act
(INA), which, along with other immigration laws,
treaties, and conventions of the United States,
relates to the immigration, temporary admission,
naturalization, and removal of aliens.
Immigration Marriage Fraud Amendments of 1986
- Public Law 99-639 (Act of 11/10/86), which was
passed in order to deter immigration-related
marriage fraud. Its major provision stipulates
that aliens deriving their immigrant status
based on a marriage of less than two years are
conditional immigrants. To remove their
conditional status the immigrants must apply at
an U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
office during the 90-day period before their
second-year anniversary of receiving conditional
status. If the aliens cannot show that the
marriage through which the status was obtained
was and is a valid one, their conditional
immigrant status may be terminated and they may
become deportable.
Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) of
1986 - Public Law 99-603 (Act of
11/6/86), which was passed in order to control
and deter illegal immigration to the United
States. Its major provisions stipulate
legalization of undocumented aliens who had been
continuously unlawfully present since 1982,
legalization of certain agricultural workers,
sanctions for employers who knowingly hire
undocumented workers, and increased enforcement
at U.S. borders.
Inadmissible - An alien seeking admission
at a port of entry who does not meet the
criteria in the INA for admission. The alien may
be placed in removal proceedings or, under
certain circumstances, allowed to withdraw his
or her application for admission.
Industrial Trainee - See
Temporary Worker.
International Representative - As a
nonimmigrant class of admission, an alien coming
temporarily to the United States as a principal
or other accredited representative of a foreign
government (whether officially recognized or not
recognized by the United States) to an
international organization, an international
organization officer or employee, and all above
aliens’ spouses and unmarried minor (or
dependent) children.
Intracompany Transferee - An alien,
employed for at least one continuous year out of
the last three by an international firm or
corporation, who seeks to enter the United
States temporarily in order to continue to work
for the same employer, or a subsidiary or
affiliate, in a capacity that is primarily
managerial, executive, or involves specialized
knowledge, and the alien’s spouse and minor
unmarried children.
IRCA - See Immigration Reform and Control
Act of 1986.
L
Labor
Certification - Requirement for U.S.
employers seeking to employ certain persons
whose immigration to the United States is based
on job skills or nonimmigrant temporary workers
coming to perform services for which qualified
authorized workers are unavailable in the United
States. Labor certification is issued by the
Secretary of Labor and contains attestations by
U.S. employers as to the numbers of U.S. workers
available to undertake the employment sought by
an applicant, and the effect of the alien’s
employment on the wages and working conditions
of U.S. workers similarly employed.
Determination of labor availability in the
United States is made at the time of a visa
application and at the location where the
applicant wishes to work.
Lawful Permanent
Resident (LPR) - Any person not a citizen
of the United States who is residing the in the
U.S. under legally recognized and lawfully
recorded permanent residence as an immigrant.
Also known as "Permanent Resident Alien,"
"Resident Alien Permit Holder," and "Green Card
Holder."
Legalization Dependents - A maximum of
55,000 visas were issued to spouses and children
of aliens legalized under the provisions of the
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 in
each of fiscal years 1992-94.
Legalized Aliens - Certain illegal aliens
who were eligible to apply for temporary
resident status under the legalization provision
of the Immigration Reform and Control Act of
1986. To be eligible, aliens must have
continuously resided in the United States in an
unlawful status since January 1, 1982, not be
excludable, and have entered the United States
either 1) illegally before January 1, 1982, or
2) as temporary visitors before January 1, 1982,
with their authorized stay expiring before that
date or with the Government’s knowledge of their
unlawful status before that date. Legalization
consists of two stages--temporary and then
permanent residency. In order to adjust to
permanent status aliens must have had continuous
residence in the United States, be admissible as
an immigrant, and demonstrate at least a minimal
understanding and knowledge of the English
language and U.S. history and government.
Legitimated
- Most countries have legal procedures for
natural fathers of children born
out of wedlock
to acknowledge their children. A legitimated
child from any country has two legal parents and
cannot qualify as an
orphan
unless:
-
only one of the parents is living, or
-
both of the parents have abandoned the child
M
Medical and
Legal Parolee - See
Parolee.
Medical Waiver
- A medical waiver permits an immigration
applicant to be allowed into, or remain in the
United States despite having a health condition
identified as grounds of inadmissibility. Terms
and conditions can be applied to a medical
waiver on a case by case basis.
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) –
MSAs consist of a core area with a large
population and adjacent communities having a
high degree of social and economic integration
with the core. They are defined by the U.S.
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). MSAs are
generally counties (cities and towns in New
England) containing at least one city or
urbanized area with a population of at least
50,000 and a total metropolitan population of at
least 100,000 (75,000 in New England). MSAs of
one million or more population may be recognized
as Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas (CMSAs).
Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PSMAs)
are component areas within MSAs. New England
County Metropolitan Areas (NECMAs) are the
county based metropolitan alternative of the New
England states for the city and town based MSAs
and CMSAs.
Migrant -
A person who leaves his/her country of origin to
seek residence in another country.
N
NACARA -
Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American
Relief Act.
National
- A person owing permanent allegiance to a
state.
NATO Official
- As a nonimmigrant class of admission, an alien
coming temporarily to the United States as a
member of the armed forces or as a civilian
employed by the armed forces on assignment with
a foreign government signatory to NATO (North
Atlantic Treaty Organization), and the alien’s
spouse and unmarried minor (or dependent)
children.
Naturalization
- The conferring, by any means, of citizenship
upon a person after birth.
Naturalization
Application - The form used by a lawful
permanent resident to apply for U.S.
citizenship. The application is filed with U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services at the
Service Center with jurisdiction over the
applicant’s place of residence.
Nonimmigrant
- An alien who seeks temporary entry to the
United States for a specific purpose. The alien
must have a permanent residence abroad (for most
classes of admission) and qualify for the
nonimmigrant classification sought. The
nonimmigrant classifications include: foreign
government officials, visitors for business and
for pleasure, aliens in transit through the
United States, treaty traders and investors,
students, international representatives,
temporary workers and trainees, representatives
of foreign information media, exchange visitors,
fiance(e)s of U.S. citizens, intracompany
transferees, NATO officials, religious workers,
and some others. Most nonimmigrants can be
accompanied or joined by spouses and unmarried
minor (or dependent) children.
Nonpreference
Category - Nonpreference visas were
available to qualified applicants not entitled
to a visa under the preferences until the
category was eliminated by the Immigration Act
of 1990. Nonpreference visas for persons not
entitled to the other preferences had not been
available since September 1978 because of high
demand in the preference categories. An
additional 5,000 nonpreference visas were
available in each of fiscal years 1987 and 1988
under a provision of the Immigration Reform and
Control Act of 1986. This program was extended
into 1989, 1990, and 1991 with 15,000 visas
issued each year. Aliens born in countries from
which immigration was adversely affected by the
Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments of
1965 (Public Law 89-236) were eligible for the
special nonpreference visas.
North American
Free-Trade Agreement (NAFTA) - Public Law
103-182 (Act of 12/8/93), superseded the United
States-Canada Free-Trade Agreement as of 1/1/94.
It continues the special, reciprocal trading
relationship between the United States and
Canada (see United States-Canada Free-Trade
Agreement), and establishes a similar
relationship with Mexico.
Numerical Limit,
Exempt from - Those aliens accorded
lawful permanent residence who are exempt from
the provisions of the flexible numerical limit
of 675,000 set by the Immigration Act of 1990.
Exempt categories include immediate relatives of
U.S. citizens, refugees, asylees (limited to
10,000 per year by section 209(b) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act), Amerasians,
aliens adjusted under the legalization
provisions of the Immigration Reform and Control
Act of 1986, and certain parolees from the
former Soviet Union and Indochina.
Nursing Relief
Act of 1989 - Public Law 101-238 (Act of
12/18/89), provides for the adjustment to
permanent resident status of certain
nonimmigrants who as of September 1, 1989, had
H-1 nonimmigrant status as registered nurses;
who had been employed in that capacity for at
least 3 years; and whose continued nursing
employment meets certain labor certification
requirements.
O
Occupation
- For an alien entering the United States or
adjusting without a labor certification,
occupation refers to the employment held in the
country of last legal residence or in the United
States. For an alien with a labor certification,
occupation is the employment for which
certification has been issued.
Orphan -
The Immigration and Nationality Act provides a
definition of an
orphan for the purposes of
immigration to the United States.
A child may be considered an orphan because of
the death or disappearance of, abandonment or
desertion by, or separation or loss from, both
parents. The child of an unwed mother or
surviving parent may be considered an orphan if
that parent is unable to care for the child
properly and has, in writing, irrevocably
released the child for emigration and adoption.
The child of an unwed mother may be considered
an orphan, as long as the mother
does not marry
(which would result in the child’s having a
stepfather) and as long as the child’s
biological father has not
legitimated
the child. If the father legitimates the child
or the mother marries, the mother is no longer
considered a sole parent. The child of a
surviving parent may also be an orphan if the
surviving parent has
not married
since the death of the other parent (which would
result in the child’s having a stepfather or
stepmother).
Note: Prospective adoptive parents should be
sure that a child fits the definition of
”orphan” before adopting a child from another
country, because not all children adopted abroad
meet the definition of “orphan,” and therefore
may not be eligible to immigrate to the United
States.
Out of Wedlock
(born out of wedlock) - A child born of
parents who were not legally married to each
other at that time.
Note: Adoptive and prospective adoptive parents
of a child who was born out of wedlock in any
country should find out whether or not the child
has been
legitimated.
P
Panama Canal Act
Immigrants - Three categories of special
immigrants established by Public Law 96-70 (Act
of 9/27/79): 1) certain former employees of the
Panama Canal Company or Canal Zone Government,
their spouses and accompanying children; 2)
certain former employees of the U.S. Government
in the Panama Canal Zone who are Panamanian
nationals, their spouses and children; and 3)
certain former employees of the Panama Canal
Company or Canal Zone Government on April 1,
1979, their spouses and children. The Act
provides for admission of a maximum of 15,000
immigrants, at a rate of no more than 5,000 each
year.
Panel Physician
– A medically trained, licensed and experienced
doctor practicing overseas who is appointed by
the local U.S. Embassy or Consulate. These
medical professionals receive U.S.
immigration-focused training in order to provide
examinations as required by the CDC (Center for
Disease Control and Prevention) and USCIS (U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services). For
medical examinations given in the U.S., please
see
Civil Surgeon.
IMPORTANT: medical examinations given overseas
will not be recognized if they are given by a
doctor who is not appointed by the local U.S.
Consulate or Embassy; please be sure that your
medical exam is being given by a Panel Physician
or your results and documents will be invalid.
Parolee -
A parolee is an alien, appearing to be
inadmissible to the inspecting officer, allowed
into the United States for urgent humanitarian
reasons or when that alien’s entry is determined
to be for significant public benefit. Parole
does not constitute a formal admission to the
United States and confers temporary status only,
requiring parolees to leave when the conditions
supporting their parole cease to exist. Types of
parolees include:
-
Deferred
inspection: authorized at the port
upon alien’s arrival; may be conferred by an
immigration inspector when aliens appear at
a port of entry with documentation, but
after preliminary examination, some question
remains about their admissibility which can
best be answered at their point of
destination.
-
Advance
parole: authorized at an USCIS
District office in advance of alien’s
arrival; may be issued to aliens residing in
the United States in other than lawful
permanent resident status who have an
unexpected need to travel and return, and
whose conditions of stay do not otherwise
allow for readmission to the United States
if they depart.
-
Port-of-entry parole: authorized at
the port upon alien’s arrival; applies to a
wide variety of situations and is used at
the discretion of the supervisory
immigration inspector, usually to allow
short periods of entry. Examples include
allowing aliens who could not be issued the
necessary documentation within the required
time period, or who were otherwise
inadmissible, to attend a funeral and
permitting the entry of emergency workers,
such as fire fighters, to assist with an
emergency.
-
Humanitarian parole: authorized at
USCIS headquarters or overseas District
Offices for "urgent humanitarian reasons"
specified in the law. It is used in cases of
medical emergency and comparable situations.
-
Significant
Public Benefit Parole: authorized at
USCIS headquarters
Office of
International Affairs for
"significant public benefit" specified in
the law. It is generally used for aliens who
enter to take part in legal proceedings when
there is a benefit to the government.
These
requests must be submitted by a law
enforcement agency.
-
Overseas
parole: authorized at an USCIS
District or suboffice while the alien is
still overseas; designed to constitute
long-term admission to the United States. In
recent years, most of the aliens USCIS has
processed through overseas parole have
arrived under special legislation or
international migration agreements.
Per-Country
Limit - The maximum number of
family-sponsored and employment-based preference
visas that can be issued to citizens of any
country in a fiscal year. The limits are
calculated each fiscal year depending on the
total number of family-sponsored and
employment-based visas available. No more than 7
percent of the visas may be issued to natives of
any one independent country in a fiscal year; no
more than 2 percent may issued to any one
dependency of any independent country. The
per-country limit does not indicate, however,
that a country is entitled to the maximum number
of visas each year, just that it cannot receive
more than that number. Because of the combined
workings of the preference system and
per-country limits, most countries do not reach
this level of visa issuance.
Permanent
Resident - Any person not a citizen of
the United States who is residing in the U.S.
under legally recognized and lawfully recorded
permanent residence as an immigrant. Also known
as
"Permanent Resident
Alien",
"Lawful Permanent
Resident," "Resident Alien Permit
Holder," and "Green Card Holder."
Permanent
Resident Alien - an alien admitted to the
United States as a lawful permanent resident.
Permanent residents are also commonly referred
to as immigrants; however, the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA) broadly defines an
immigrant as any alien in the United States,
except one legally admitted under specific
nonimmigrant categories (INA section
101(a)(15)). An illegal alien who entered the
United States without inspection, for example,
would be strictly defined as an immigrant under
the INA but is not a permanent resident alien.
Lawful permanent residents are legally accorded
the privilege of residing permanently in the
United States. They may be issued immigrant
visas by the Department of State overseas or
adjusted to permanent resident status by U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services in the
United States.
Port of Entry
- Any location in the United States or its
territories that is designated as a point of
entry for aliens and U.S. citizens. All district
and files control offices are also considered
ports, since they become locations of entry for
aliens adjusting to immigrant status.
Pre-inspection
- Complete immigration inspection of airport
passengers before departure from a foreign
country. No further immigration inspection is
required upon arrival in the United States other
than submission of Form I-94 for nonimmigrant
aliens.
Preference
System (prior to fiscal year 1992) - The
six categories among which 270,000 immigrant
visa numbers were distributed each year during
the period 1981-91. This preference system was
amended by the Immigration Act of 1990,
effective fiscal year 1992. (see Preference
System - Immigration Act of 1990). The six
categories were: 1) unmarried sons and daughters
(over 21 years of age) of U.S. citizens (20
percent); 2) spouses and unmarried sons and
daughters of aliens lawfully admitted for
permanent residence (26 percent); 3) members of
the professions or persons of exceptional
ability in the sciences and arts (10 percent);
4) married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens
(10 percent); 5) brothers and sisters of U.S.
citizens over 21 years of age (24 percent); and
6) needed skilled or unskilled workers (10
percent). A nonpreference category, historically
open to immigrants not entitled to a visa number
under one of the six preferences just listed,
had no numbers available beginning in September
1978.
Preference
System (Immigration Act of 1990) - The
nine categories since fiscal year 1992 among
which the family-sponsored and employment-based
immigrant preference visas are distributed. The
family-sponsored preferences are: 1) unmarried
sons and daughters of U.S. citizens; 2) spouses,
children, and unmarried sons and daughters of
permanent resident aliens; 3) married sons and
daughters of U.S. citizens; 4) brothers and
sisters of U.S. citizens. The employment-based
preferences are: 1) priority workers (persons of
extraordinary ability, outstanding professors
and researchers, and certain multinational
executives and managers); 2) professionals with
advanced degrees or aliens with exceptional
ability; 3) skilled workers, professionals
(without advanced degrees), and needed unskilled
workers; 4) special immigrants; and 5)
employment creation immigrants (investors).
Principal Alien
- The alien who applies for immigrant status and
from whom another alien may derive lawful status
under immigration law or regulations (usually
spouses and minor unmarried children).
Priority Date
- In the USCIS Immigrant visa petition
application process, the priority date is the
date the petition was filed. If the alien
relative has a priority date on or before the
date listed in the visa bulletin, then he or she
is currently eligible for a visa.
R
Refugee -
Any person who is outside his or her country of
nationality who is unable or unwilling to return
to that country because of persecution or a
well-founded fear of persecution. Persecution or
the fear thereof must be based on the alien’s
race, religion, nationality, membership in a
particular social group, or political opinion.
People with no nationality must generally be
outside their country of last habitual residence
to qualify as a refugee. Refugees are subject to
ceilings by geographic area set annually by the
President in consultation with Congress and are
eligible to adjust to lawful permanent resident
status after one year of continuous presence in
the United States.
Refugee
Approvals - The number of refugees
approved for admission to the United States
during a fiscal year.
Refugee Arrivals
- The number of refugees admitted to the United
States through ports of entry during a fiscal
year.
Refugee
Authorized Admissions - The maximum
number of refugees allowed to enter the United
States in a given fiscal year. As set forth in
the Refugee Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-212) the
President determines the annual figure after
consultations with Congress.
Refugee-Parolee
- A qualified applicant for conditional entry,
between February 1970 and April 1980, whose
application for admission to the United States
could not be approved because of inadequate
numbers of seventh preference visas. As a
result, the applicant was paroled into the
United States under the parole authority granted
to the Secretary of Homeland Security.
Regional Offices
- The three USCIS Regional Offices that
supervise the work of USCIS Districts and Border
Patrol Sectors. The Regional Directors report to
the Associate Director for Operations in USCIS
Headquarters, Washington, DC. The three Regional
Offices are located in (Eastern Region)
Burlington, VT, (Central Region) Dallas, TX, and
(Western Region) Laguna Nigel, CA.
Registry Date
- Aliens who have continuously resided in the
United States since January 1, 1972, are of good
moral character, and are not inadmissible, are
eligible to adjust to legal permanent resident
status under the registry provision. Before the
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
amended the date, aliens had to have been in the
country continuously since June 30, 1948, to
qualify.
Removal -
The expulsion of an alien from the United
States. This expulsion may be based on grounds
of inadmissibility or deportability.
Required
Departure - See
Voluntary Departure.
Resettlement
- Permanent relocation of refugees in a place
outside their country of origin to allow them to
establish residence and become productive
members of society there. Refugee resettlement
is accomplished with the direct assistance of
private voluntary agencies working with the
Department of Health and Human Services Office
of Refugee Resettlement.
Resident Alien
- Applies to non-U.S. citizens currently
residing in the United States. The term is
applied in three different manners; please see
Permanent Resident,
Conditional Resident,
and Returning Resident
Returning
Resident - Any
Lawful Permanent
Resident who has been outside the
United States and is returning to the U.S. Also
defined as a "special immigrant." If outside of
the U.S. for more than 180 days, must apply for
readmission to the U.S. If outside of the U.S.
for more than one year and is returning to his
or her permanent residence in the United States,
usually must have a re-entry documentation from
USCIS or an immigrant visa from the Department
of State.
S
Safe Haven
- Temporary refuge given to migrants who have
fled their countries of origin to seek
protection or relief from persecution or other
hardships, until they can return to their
countries safely or, if necessary until they can
obtain permanent relief from the conditions they
fled.
Service Centers
- Four offices established to handle the filing,
data entry, and adjudication of certain
applications for immigration services and
benefits. The applications are mailed to INS
Service Centers -- Service Centers are not
staffed to receive walk-in applications or
questions.
Special
Agricultural Workers (SAW) - Aliens who
performed labor in perishable agricultural
commodities for a specified period of time and
were admitted for temporary and then permanent
residence under a provision of the Immigration
Reform and Control Act of 1986. Up to 350,000
aliens who worked at least 90 days in each of
the 3 years preceding May 1, 1986 were eligible
for Group I temporary resident status. Eligible
aliens who qualified under this requirement but
applied after the 350,000 limit was met and
aliens who performed labor in perishable
agricultural commodities for at least 90 days
during the year ending May 1, 1986 were eligible
for Group II temporary resident status.
Adjustment to permanent resident status is
essentially automatic for both groups; however,
aliens in Group I were eligible on December 1,
1989 and those in Group II were eligible one
year later on December 1, 1990.
Special
Immigrants - Certain categories of
immigrants who were exempt from numerical
limitation before fiscal year 1992 and subject
to limitation under the employment-based fourth
preference beginning in 1992; persons who lost
citizenship by marriage; persons who lost
citizenship by serving in foreign armed forces;
ministers of religion and other religious
workers, their spouses and children; certain
employees and former employees of the U.S.
Government abroad, their spouses and children;
Panama Canal Act immigrants; certain foreign
medical school graduates, their spouses and
children; certain retired employees of
international organizations, their spouses and
children; juvenile court dependents; and certain
aliens serving in the U.S. Armed Forces, their
spouses and children.
Special
Naturalization Provisions - Provisions
covering special classes of persons whom may be
naturalized even though they do not meet all the
general requirements for naturalization. Such
special provisions allow: 1) wives or husbands
of U.S. citizens to file for naturalization
after three years of lawful permanent residence
instead of the prescribed five years; 2) a
surviving spouse of a U.S. citizen who served in
the armed forces to file his or her
naturalization application in any district
instead of where he/she resides; and 3) children
of U.S. citizen parents to be naturalized
without meeting certain requirements or taking
the oath, if too young to understand the
meaning. Other classes of persons who may
qualify for special consideration are former
U.S. citizens, servicemen, seamen, and employees
of organizations promoting U.S. interests
abroad.
Sponsor -
There are many ways to sponsor an alien. The
term "sponsor" in the immigration sense, often
means to bring to the United States or "petition
for". If you would like to sponsor, or petition
for, a relative, please read the information
entitled
"How do I Bring my
Family to the United States to Live?"
If you would like to sponsor, or petition for,
an employee, please see the instructions
entitled
"How Do I Get
Immigrant Status Based on Employment?"
If you would like to sponsor, or petition for,
an overseas orphan, please refer to the
information entitled
"How do I bring an
orphan to the United States to live?"
If you are a refugee or an asylee and wish to
sponsor, or petition for a relative, please
refer to the document entitled
"How Do I Get my
Children or Spouse Derivative Asylum (or
Refugee) Status?"
Another meaning of the term "sponsor" is a
person who completes
Form I-864,
Affidavit of Support Under Section 213A of the
Act. This type of sponsorship is not, however,
the first step in any immigration process.
In order to be a sponsor and file Form I-864,
Affidavit of Support Under Section 213A of the
Act, the following conditions must already be
met:
-
You have already petitioned for your
relative;
-
You have been notified that INS has approved
the petition;
-
The visa for that relative is currently
available;
-
The relative has been scheduled to appear to
submit his or her application for an
immigrant visa overseas to a Consular
Officer (DOS Form OF-230) or is preparing to
file for adjustment of status to that of a
lawful permanent resident (on
Form I-485,
Application to Register Permanent Residence
or Adjust Status) in the United States. In
the case of the overseas relative, you, the
petitioner will be informed as to where and
when to submit Form I-864. In the case where
the relative is in the United States, you,
the petitioner will complete Form I-864 and
give it to your relative to file along with
his or her application for permanent
residency.
If you are a U.S. citizen and are sponsoring, or
petitioning for, your spouse, parents or minor
children who are currently in the United States,
the above conditions do not need to be met in
that exact order. Your relative may file his or
her application for adjustment of status to that
of a lawful permanent resident at the same time
you file the relative petition. If this is your
situation, you, the petitioner, must complete
Form I-864, Affidavit of Support, and the
petition for your relative and give them to your
relative to submit with the application for
adjustment of status.
For further information on filing for adjustment
of status to that of a lawful permanent
resident, please refer to the instructions
entitled
"How Do I Become a
Lawful Permanent Resident While in the United
States?" For further information
about being a sponsor on Form I-864, please see
the instructions entitled
"How Do I
File an
Affidavit of Support for a Relative?"
or see
"Affidavit of Support
Package".
Stateless
- Having no nationality.
Stowaway
- An alien coming to the United States
surreptitiously on an airplane or vessel without
legal status of admission. Such an alien is
subject to denial of formal admission and return
to the point of embarkation by the
transportation carrier.
Student -
As a nonimmigrant class of admission, an alien
coming temporarily to the United States to
pursue a full course of study in an approved
program in either an academic (college,
university, seminary, conservatory, academic
high school, elementary school, other
institution, or language training program) or a
vocational or other recognized nonacademic
institution.
Suboffices
- Offices found in some Districts that serve a
portion of the District’s jurisdiction. A
Suboffice, headed by an Officer-in-Charge,
provides many services and enforcement
functions. Their locations are determined, in
part, to increase convenience to INS’ customers.
Subject to the
Numerical Limit - Categories of legal
immigrants subject to annual limits under the
provisions of the flexible numerical limit of
675,000 set by the Immigration Act of 1990. The
largest categories are: family-sponsored
preferences; employment-based preferences; and
diversity immigrants.
T
Temporary
Protected Status (TPS) - Establishes a
legislative basis for allowing a group of
persons temporary refuge in the United States.
Under a provision of the Immigration Act of
1990, the Attorney General may designate
nationals of a foreign state to be eligible for
TPS with a finding that conditions in that
country pose a danger to personal safety due to
ongoing armed conflict or an environmental
disaster. Grants of TPS are initially made for
periods of 6 to 18 months and may be extended
depending on the situation. Removal proceedings
are suspended against aliens while they are in
Temporary Protected Status.
Temporary
Resident - See
Nonimmigrant.
Temporary Worker
- An alien coming to the United States to work
for a temporary period of time. The Immigration
Reform and Control Act of 1986 and the
Immigration Act of 1990, as well as other
legislation, revised existing classes and
created new classes of nonimmigrant admission.
Nonimmigrant temporary worker classes of
admission are as follows:
-
H-1A - registered nurses (valid from
10/1/1990 through 9/30/1995);
-
H-1B - workers with "specialty occupations"
admitted on the basis of professional
education, skills, and/or equivalent
experience;
-
H-1C - registered nurses to work in areas
with a shortage of health professionals
under the Nursing Relief for Disadvantaged
Areas Act of 1999;
-
H-2A - temporary agricultural workers coming
to the United States to perform agricultural
services or labor of a temporary or seasonal
nature when authorized workers are
unavailable in the United States;
-
H-2B - temporary non-agricultural workers
coming to the United States to perform
temporary services or labor if unemployed
persons capable of performing the service or
labor cannot be found in the United States;
-
H-3 - aliens coming temporarily to the
United States as trainees, other than to
receive graduate medical education or
training;
-
O-1, O-2, O-3 - temporary workers with
extraordinary ability or achievement in the
sciences, arts, education, business, or
athletics; those entering solely for the
purpose of accompanying and assisting such
workers; and their spouses and children;
-
P-1, P-2, P-3, P-4 - athletes and
entertainers at an internationally
recognized level of performance; artists and
entertainers under a reciprocal exchange
program; artists and entertainers under a
program that is "culturally unique"; and
their spouses and children;
-
Q-1, Q-2, Q-3 - participants in
international cultural exchange programs;
participants in the Irish Peace Process
Cultural and Training Program; and spouses
and children of Irish Peace Process
participants;
-
R-1, R-2 - temporary workers to perform work
in religious occupations and their spouses
and children.
See other sections of this Glossary for
definitions of Exchange Visitor, Intracompany
Transferee, and U.S.-Canada or North American
Free-Trade Agreement classes of nonimmigrant
admission.
Transit Alien
- An alien in immediate and continuous transit
through the United States, with or without a
visa, including, 1) aliens who qualify as
persons entitled to pass in transit to and from
the United Nations Headquarters District and
foreign countries and 2) foreign government
officials and their spouses and unmarried minor
(or dependent) children in transit.
Transition
Quarter - The three-month period--July 1
through September 30, 1976--between fiscal year
1976 and fiscal year 1977. At that time, the
fiscal year definition shifted from July 1-June
30 to October 1-September 30.
Transit Without
Visa (TWOV) - A transit alien traveling
without a nonimmigrant visa under section 233 of
the INA. An alien admitted under agreements with
a transportation line, which guarantees his
immediate and continuous passage to a foreign
destination. (See
Transit Alien.)
Treaty Trader or
Investor - As a nonimmigrant class of
admission, an alien coming to the United States,
under the provisions of a treaty of commerce and
navigation between the United States and the
foreign state of such alien, to carry on
substantial trade or to direct the operations of
an enterprise in which he/she has invested a
substantial amount of capital, and the alien’s
spouse and unmarried minor children.
U
Underrepresented
Countries, Natives of - The Immigration
Amendments of 1988, Public Law 101-658 (Act of
11/5/88) allowed for 10,000 visas to be issued
to natives of underrepresented countries in each
of fiscal years 1990 and 1991. Under-represented
countries are defined as countries that received
less than 25 percent of the maximum allowed
under the country limitations (20,000 for
independent countries and 5,000 for
dependencies) in fiscal year 1988. (See
Diversity.)
United
States-Canada Free-Trade Agreement -
Public Law 100-449 (Act of 9/28/88) established
a special, reciprocal trading relationship
between the United States and Canada. It
provided two new classes of nonimmigrant
admission for temporary visitors to the United
States-Canadian citizen business persons and
their spouses and unmarried minor children.
Entry is facilitated for visitors seeking
classification as visitors for business, treaty
traders or investors, intracompany transferees,
or other business people engaging in activities
at a professional level. Such visitors are not
required to obtain nonimmigrant visas, prior
petitions, labor certifications, or prior
approval but must satisfy the inspecting officer
they are seeking entry to engage in activities
at a professional level and that they are so
qualified. The United States-Canada Free-Trade
Agreement was superseded by the North American
Free-Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as of 1/1/94.
V
Visa - A
U.S.
visa allows
the bearer to apply for entry to the U.S. in a
certain classification (e.g. student (F),
visitor (B), temporary worker (H)). A visa does
not grant the bearer the right to enter the
United States. The
Department of State
(DOS) is responsible for visa adjudication at
U.S. Embassies and Consulates outside of the
U.S. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS),
Bureau of Customs and
Border Protection (BCBP) immigration
inspectors determine admission into, length of
stay and conditions of stay in, the U.S. at a
port of entry. The information on a nonimmigrant
visa only relates to when an individual may
apply for entry into the U.S. DHS immigration
inspectors will record the terms of your
admission on your Arrival/Departure Record (I-94
white or I-94W green) and in your passport.
Visa Waiver
Program - Allows citizens of certain
selected countries, traveling temporarily to the
United States under the nonimmigrant admission
classes of visitors for pleasure and visitors
for business, to enter the United States without
obtaining nonimmigrant visas. Admission is for
no more than 90 days. The program was instituted
by the Immigration Reform and Control Act of
1986 (entries began 7/1/88). Under the Guam Visa
Waiver Program, certain visitors from designated
countries may visit Guam only for up to 15 days
without first having to obtain nonimmigrant
visitor visas.
Voluntary
Departure - The departure of an alien
from the United States without an order of
removal. The departure may or may not have been
preceded by a hearing before an immigration
judge. An alien allowed to voluntarily depart
concedes removability but does not have a bar to
seeking admission at a port-of-entry at any
time. Failure to depart within the time granted
results in a fine and a ten-year bar to several
forms of relief from deportation.
W
Withdrawal
- An arriving alien’s voluntary retraction of an
application for admission to the United States
in lieu of a removal hearing before an
immigration judge or an expedited removal.
Withdrawals are not included in nonimmigrant
admission data.
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