Report

After the Darien: Aid and Pathways for Migrants in Panama and Costa Rica

Issue Brief

“Don’t Tell Me About Your Fear”: Elimination of Longstanding Safeguard Leads to Systematic Violations of Refugee Law

Report

Improving the Socio-economic Integration of LGBTIQ+ Refugees in Costa Rica

Statement

Refugees International Remembers Jimmy Carter

Statement

Harvard Law Clinic and Jenner & Block LLP Sue for Information Refugees International Requested on AI’s Role in Asylum Decisions 

Statement

NBA: Suspend Your Partnerships with the UAE and #SpeakOutOnSudan

Explainer

Fact Sheet: Resources for CHNV Parolees, December 2024 

Opinion

USA Today: Biden’s Legacy Can Be a Humane Transition or a Slammed Door on Asylum Seekers

Opinion

USA Today: ‘I Can’t Go Back. The U.S. is My Only Option’: Why Biden’s Border Policy Isn’t Working

Advocacy Letter

64 Civil Society Organizations Call on Canada to Respond to Crisis in Sudan

Advocacy Letter

75+ Organizations and Congregations Urge the Biden Administration to Take Action Following Changes to CBP One Appointments

Advocacy Letter

80+ Organizations Express Objection to Border Act of 2024

Event

Cartagena +40: Where Next for Refugee Protection in Latin America? 

Groups of migrants walk hundreds of kilometers on the highway from Chihuahua to Ciudad Juarez, in order to reach the United States in Chihuahua, Mexico on April 12, 2024. Photo by Christian Torres/Anadolu via Getty Images.
Event

U.S. Election Implications on Migration Policy in the Americas 

Event

A Better Approach Toward Reception of People Seeking Asylum

Commentary

Comment on the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security’s Final Rule on Securing the Border

Commentary

One Year Later, We’re Still Fighting To #LetAsylumSeekersWork

Commentary

Biden Administration’s ‘Securing the Border’ Regulation Should Be Rescinded

Featured Image: Venezuelan migrants seen walking on adverse roads to reach Chile, across the Bolivian border, near Colchane. © Lucas Aguayo/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images