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Coming to America: Refugee Resettlement Presented by Rachele King March 2012. Imagine…. Overview. Flight : Refugee realities Overseas process: How refugees come to MN Arrival and Domestic Resettlement: The role of resettlement agencies. Adjustment and life in the US.
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Coming to America:Refugee ResettlementPresented by Rachele KingMarch 2012
Overview • Flight : Refugee realities • Overseas process: How refugees come to MN • Arrival and Domestic Resettlement: The role of resettlement agencies. • Adjustment and life in the US
Definition of Refugee A person who has been forced to flee his/her homeland and is unable to return because she or he has experienced persecution or has a well-founded fear of persecution.
Persecution based on: • Race • Religion • Nationality • Membership of a particular social group • Political opinion
TheLife of a Refugee Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya
TheLife of a Refugee • Stuck in limbo • Little or no opportunity to pursue education or stable employment • Residing in refugee camps with unsafe conditions • Violence • Disease
Refugee Realities: Refugees often stay in protracted refugee situations for years or even decades. Less than ½ of 1% are permanently resettled anywhere in the world in a given year. Photo Courtesy of UNHCR
Presidential Determination • Signed into law each October by the US President • Sets US refugee arrival ceilings • Lists priority populations for resettlement in the coming year • Determines Nationalities eligible for “Family Reunification”
FY 2011 Proposed Admissions Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15,000East Asia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19,000Europe and Central Asia . . . . . . . . .2,000Latin America/Caribbean. . . . . . . . . 5,500Near East/South Asia. . . . . . . . . . 35,000Unallocated Reserve . . . . . . . . . . .3,000 TOTAL……………………………..80,000
Overseas Process • Several interviews with NGOs • Interview with US Homeland Security • Security clearances • Medical Screening • Cultural orientation • Travel loan singned
Status in the USA • “Refugee” is a unique immigration status • Work Authorized upon arrival • Permanent status • Path to US Citizenship • Eligible for public benefits
Minnesota is “Special” • Minnesota has the highest ratio of refugee : foreign born residents in the United States • 47% of the foreign-born population in Minnesota entered as refugees, as compared to 17% nation-wide. • Based on ORR annual survey Minnesota led the country in welcoming “secondary arrivals” • For every one refugee that leaves MN for another state, three come to MN to build a home.
All refugees arrive through a Voluntary Agency (VOLAG) Locally, there are 6 VOLAGs: • Minnesota Council of Churches (MCC) • World Relief • International Institute • Catholic Charities • Lutheran Social Services • Jewish Family Services
Reception and Placement (R&P) Pre-Arrival Planning 30 day service period $925 transitional grant funds per person
30-90 days “Resettlement Period” What do VOLAGs do??
Core Services • Pre-Arrival Planning • Airport reception • Basic needs • Home and Community orientation • Connect to services • Public benefits • Health services • Social Security • Educational service • Community resources • Employment services • Specialized services • More!
“LINKAGES” • Volunteers and community supports • Refugees are eligible for benefits like US Citizens.
Realities… • Still need to struggle to survive • Complicated bureaucracies to navigate • Complicated rules / compliance requirements to receive services. • Mixed messages • Systems don’t always work… self advocacy needed. • Hope can be hard to sustain