U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
  • LANGUAGE OPTIONS


Policy and Advocacy Newsletter: VOLUME 9 | ISSUE NO.5 January 30, 2026

February 2, 2026

Our Policy and Advocacy Newsletter introduces our latest project: From the Archives.

For more than a century, the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants has advocated for the rights and dignity of refugees. For our 115th anniversary, we are revisiting our archives to pair earlier works with contemporary reflections on how the lessons of history resonate today. Looking back, we see the moral clarity that past staff and contributors brought when condemning policies that endangered those fleeing persecution. Too often, that conviction has not guided the actions of policymakers and the international community in responding to the needs of refugees today. We hope that From the Archives invites readers to reflect on what has endured, what has been lost, and what is still required to protect those forced to flee. See the project summary here.

The first ‘From the Archives’ feature re-publishes a piece Elie Wiesel wrote for USCRI in 1997 to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day. Wiesel, who became stateless in the aftermath of the Holocaust, reminds of the importance of opening our hearts to those in need of a new home.

“In this twentieth century, marked and perhaps doomed by its unprecedented taste for hatred, violence, and bloodshed, all refugees are, almost by definition, innocent,” he wrote. “What should our attitude be toward them? I would say: let us remain faithful to our tradition and open if not our borders at least our hearts to them. We have all been refugees before landing on these shores.”

The newsletter also reports on legal challenges to Operation PARRIS, an initiative by DHS to reexamine thousands of refugees in Minnesota, the termination of TPS for Somalia, an expanded travel ban now covering 39 countries, the U.S. withdrawal from over 60 international organizations, and an agreement to provide two billion dollars in humanitarian assistance, a steep drop from previous levels. The former president of Iraq, Barham Salih, has become the new UN High Commissioner for Refugees. Meanwhile, the UN Human Rights Chief, Volker Türk, has made a statement condemning the dehumanizing treatment of migrants in the United States. Finally, USCRI tells the stories of three Venezuelan refugees, forced to flee their homes and rebuild their lives in exile.

Sign-up here to get the policy and advocacy brief in your inbox directly.

 

Click here to read the full brief.

 

USCRI, founded in 1911, is a non-governmental, not-for-profit international organization committed to working on behalf of refugees and immigrants and their transition to a dignified life.

For inquiries, please contact: [email protected]


Related Posts

Country Conditions: Ukraine February 2026

On February 24, 2026, Ukraine enters its fifth year of war after a full-scale Russian invasion of the country began...

READ FULL STORY

Policy and Advocacy Newsletter: VOLUME...

Featured Brief  Double displacement occurs when people who have already been uprooted once are forced to flee again. As extreme...

READ FULL STORY

Refugees Twice Over: Climate Migration...

By: Alexia Gardner, USCRI Policy Analyst, and Anum Merchant, USCRI Policy Intern  Extreme weather continues to drive new large-scale displacement, with 2024 ranked among the highest years...

READ FULL STORY