U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Ukraine: An Update on the Mass Displacement Crisis

This is an update and supplement to USCRI’s March 2024 report on the Humanitarian Situation in Ukraine.   Mass Displacement The mass displacement crisis continues in Ukraine. Around 6 million Ukrainian refugees are hosted by European countries, and about 400,000 Ukrainians are hosted by Canada and the United States. Poland previously hosted the largest number […]

An Open Letter to Asylum Seekers

Dear asylum seekers, The U.S. Government has taken the liberty to determine that certain individuals fleeing persecution deserve safety more than others, and as asylum seekers coming to the U.S.-Mexico border, unfortunately, your plight does not measure up. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause you fleeing conflict and war, human rights violations, and […]

WORLD MENTAL HEALTH DAY: MENTAL HEALTH IN THE WORKPLACE

by: Rosalind Ghafar Rogers, PhD, LMHC, Clinical Behavioral Health Subject Matter Expert with USCRI’s Refugee Health Services in Arlington, VA October 10 is World Mental Health Day and this year’s theme is It is Time to Prioritize Mental Health in the Workplace. In recognition of this important day, USCRI would like to emphasize how integrally […]

Ecocide as a Call to Urgency: The Need to Address Climate Displacement

Cover Photo: Michael Adams In early September, Vanuatu, Fiji, and Samoa filed a formal request to recognize ecocide—purposeful and severe environmental destruction—as a crime in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC). If the request is approved, ecocide would be recognized as a gross violation of international law akin to war crimes and […]

Recovering Childhood Report: An Update on Children in Kenya’s Refugee Camps

In December 2023, the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) published its report, Recovering Childhood: Access to Education & Protection for Children in Kenya’s Refugee Camps, following field visits to Dadaab and Kakuma refugee camps and Kalobeyei Settlement. During the visits, USCRI Policy Analyst Victoria Walker examined the experiences of refugee children in the […]

Mpox Outbreak: How International Indifference Is Threatening Refugees

THE PROBLEM A new viral outbreak threatens the health and safety of 42 million forcibly displaced people in Africa. A new strain of mpox, a virus that caused a worldwide outbreak in 2022, currently threatens refugee and displaced populations in Africa, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is at the epicenter. In the […]

National Suicide Prevention Month

by: Rosalind Ghafar Rogers, PhD, LMHC, Clinical Behavioral Health Subject Matter Expert   September is National Suicide Prevention Month and we, at USCRI, recognize suicide as a global and complex public health problem that touches the lives of millions of people across every community. We hope to raise awareness of this urgently important crisis, spread […]

What is Statelessness?

Za Beda is a Rohingya woman who is forced to live in a refugee camp after Myanmar stripped her of legal protection. Starting in 2012, Myanmar launched violent attacks against the Rohingya, forcing them to flee to rural areas and camps. Za Beda has children, none of whom have birth certificates. Myanmar will not recognize […]

What is the Root Causes Strategy?

More people need refuge than ever before. The Administration’s ‘Root Causes Strategy’ aims to remedy the conditions that force people to migrate.   Driven from their homes by a myriad of factors, including gang violence, persecution, poverty, corruption, and climate change, many of our neighbors in northern Central America flee for the United States. At […]