Immigration Definitions: Q to R

A-B   C-D   E-F   G-H   I-J   K-L   M-N   O-P   Q-R   S-T   U-V   W-X   Y-Z


Q-1 Visa
Q-2 Visa
Q-3 Visa
Qualifying Relative
R-1 Visa
R-2 Visa
Refugee
Refugee Approvals
Refugee Arrivals
Refugee Authorized Admissions
Refugee-Parolee
Regional Offices
Registry Date
Removal
Resettlement
________________________________________________________________________

Questions about your immigration issue?
Call us for a Free Consultation.

Contact Us!    The People

The Heller Immigration Law Group, LLP (Toll free: 1.800.863.4448),
20 years of specialized employment-based business, and individual, immigration law.
________________________________________________________________________



top

Q-1 Visa

Participant in an International Cultural Exchange Program.

top

Q-2 Visa

Irish Peace Process Program Participant.

top

Q-3 Visa

Spouse or child of Q-2.

top

Qualifying Relative

Qualifying relative is a general term for a sponsor and may include the intending immigrant’s: spouse, parent, mother-in-law, father-in-law, sibling, child (if at least 18 years of age), son, daughter, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-law, grandparent, or grandchild.

top

R-1 Visa

Alien in a Religious Occupation.

top

R-2 Visa

Spouse or Child of R-1.

top

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.

top

Refugee Approvals

The number of refugees approved for admission to the United States during a fiscal year. Immigration and Naturalization Service officers in overseas offices make refugee approvals.

top

Refugee Arrivals

The number of refugees the Immigration and Naturalization Service initially admits to the United States through ports of entry during a fiscal year.

top

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.

top

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 the Attorney General.

top

Regional Offices

The three INS Regional Offices that supervise the work of INS Districts and Border Patrol Sectors. The Regional Directors report to the Executive Associate Commissioner for Field Operations in INS Headquarters, Washington, DC. The three Regional Offices are located in (Eastern Region) Burlington, VT, (Central Region) Dallas, TX, and (Western Region) Laguna Nigel, CA.

top

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.

top

Removal

The expulsion of an alien from the United States. This expulsion may be based on grounds of inadmissibility or deportability.

top

Resettlement

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.

Immigration Definitions: A to Z

A-B   C-D   E-F   G-H   I-J   K-L   M-N   O-P   Q-R   S-T   U-V   W-X   Y-Z
_______________________________________________________________________

The Heller Immigration Law Group, LLP (Toll free: 1.800.863.4448), also known as 'HILG', www.hilglaw.com, has specialized in employment-based and business immigration for corporate/HR, business, and individual clients for more than 20 years.

With our headquarters in San Francisco, CA (and our Silicon Valley location in Palo Alto, CA), HILG has successfully processed more than 1000 cases in all USCIS jurisdictions for clients from around the world.

EMPLOYMENT BASED IMMIGRATION

As stated, HILG specializes in employment-based immigration: USDOL fast track 'labor certifications', filed under PERM regulations, EB1 priority worker cases, i.e., Multinational Executives/Managers, Extraordinary Aliens, and Outstanding Researchers, and EB2 self-petitioning National Interest Waiver (NIW) cases.

_____________________________________________________________

Copyright©2006 - Heller Immigration Law Group, LLP
All rights reserved.