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Photo: http://www.theirc.org/our-work/resettling-refugees#
Refugee Resettlement in the US: An Examination of Challenges and Solutions
Key Terms Refugee: A person who has fled from his or her home
country and cannot return because he or she has a well-founded fear of persecution based on religion, race, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.
Resettlement: Less than 1% of refugees are resettled. UNHCR determines if an individual qualifies as a refugee and, if so, works toward the best possible durable solution for each refugee: safe return to the home country, local integration, or third-country resettlement.
Key Facts UNHCR estimates there are currently 15.4 million refugees
U.S. takes in around 2/3 of resettled refugees
In 2012, U.S. accepted more than 62,000 refugees
Top arrival groups: Bhutan, Burma/Myanmar, Cuba, Iraq, Somalia, DRC, Iran, Eritrea, Sudan, Ethiopia
UNHCR anticipates that refugees from Afghanistan, Colombia, the DRC, Myanmar, Iraq, and Somalia will be among the populations with the greatest resettlement needs in 2013
A persistent gap exists between global resettlement needs in 2013 (181,000) and places available (81,000)
Refugee flees home country
Refugee registers with
UNHCR
UNHCR, US Embassy, or NGO refer refugee to USRAP
Resettlement Support Center (RSC) Prepares Case File
DHS/USCIS interview refugee to determine he/she qualifies as a
refugee under US law
Case approved, applicant and family undergo medical exam,
security clearance, cultural orientation
PRM works with resettlement agencies and ORR to plan for location
Depart for US where local resettlement agency/volag staff
meet them
STRENGTHS OF USRAP
Partnership between government agencies and non-governmental organizations
Immediate reception of refugees
Provision of language assistance during refugees’ first 90 days in the U.S.
Programs such as Matching Grant
CHALLENGES
Conflicting policy goals
Obstacles to coordination and planning between agencies, both domestic and international
Insufficient pre-departure orientation
The “Lottery effect”, i.e. lack of uniform set of services provided to refugees
Lack of adequate funding
Lack of systematic monitoring and evaluation
RECOMMENDATIO
NS
Commission a comprehensive analysis of the domestic resettlement system .
Ensure that information collected overseas is passed on to receiving resettlement agencies.
Make projections about the needs and assets of receiving communities, and use that information to make proactive decisions about placement.
Monitor and assess outcomes indicators other than employment, such as mobility, housing, education, health status, social connections, and language skills.
Expand employment services to include recertification, job-specific employment training and extended language training.
Establish a long-term and comprehensive orientation program that takes place while refugees accepted for resettlement to the U.S. await departure.
Implement existing policy to allow secondary migration among without loss of services.