410 likes | 490 Views
Disparities in Asylum Adjudication in the United States. Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Temple University Beasley School of Law Research conducted with Andrew I. Schoenholtz and Philip G. Schrag, Georgetown University Law Center. Affirmative Asylum Applications. The Databases. Overview of Disparities.
E N D
Disparities in Asylum Adjudication in the United States Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Temple University Beasley School of Law Research conducted with Andrew I. Schoenholtz and Philip G. Schrag, Georgetown University Law Center
Grant rates by Regional Office and Human Rights Conditions (all countries on the left; all countries except China on the right)
Grant rates for Chinese claims at the New York regional asylum office
Grant rates for Chinese claims at the Newark regional asylum office
Grant rates for Chinese claims at the Los Angeles regional asylum office
Albania Armenia Cameroon China Colombia Ethiopia Guinea Haiti India Liberia Mauritania Pakistan Russia Togo Venezuela The 15 Strong Claim Countries
Albanian Cases: New York Immigration Court Grant Rates, Judges with at least 50 Albanian Cases 2000-2004 (2173 cases)
Colombian Cases: Miami Immigration Court Grant Rates, Judges with at least 50 Colombian Cases 2000-2004 (8214 cases)
BIA Rate of Decisions in Favor of Asylum Seekers, Represented and Unrepresented
BIA Decisions Favorable to Asylum Seekers by Strong Claim CountryChange from FY 2001 to FY 2002
Rate of Votes to Remand in Asylum Cases, Third Circuit Judges2004-05 (N=784 votes cast)
3d Circuit Remand Vote Rates by Political Party of Appointing President
Rate of Votes to Remand in Asylum Cases, Sixth Circuit Judges2004-05 (N=385 votes cast)
6th Circuit Remand Vote Rates by Political Party of Appointing President
Remand Rates by Circuit, Cases from Strong Claim Countries(2361 cases, 2004-05)
Asylum office grant rates: officer education and applicant representation
Asylum office grant rate by age and mode of entry Applicants from Latin America and the Caribbean All other applicants
Asylum office grant rates by status at entry, dependents, gender and representation
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2013 • Repeal the one-year filing deadline • Add 225 more immigration judges • Give every immigration judge a law clerk • Improved training for immigration judges • Appointed counsel in immigration proceedings: • Required for unaccompanied minors and people with mental disabilities • At DOJ’s discretion in other cases • BIA required to issue written opinions • Legal orientation programs for detained
Other routes to professionalization: • Turn the immigration courts and BIA into an Article I court • Institute rigorous hiring standards • Law degree requirement for asylum officers • Immigration law background for immigration judges • Restore a normal review role to federal courts • Allow more time to make decisions • Increase opportunities for interaction among adjudicators • Expose adjudicators to data such as this study • Keep additional statistics