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Policy and Advocacy Newsletter: April 23, 2026

April 23, 2026

Since our last newsletter, the Policy & Advocacy team marked three years of war in Sudan by highlighting the expansive suffering from the world’s largest displacement crisis. USCRI also reflected on the promise of Kenya’s Shirika Plan, a critical initiative to promote the inclusion of refugees in Kenya.  

USCRI also spoke with the International Institute of New England’s President, Jeff Theilman, to understand how they are taking legal action to protect clients, staff and the wider community. In the latest edition of ‘From the Archives”, we turn back to the 1994 Rwandan Genocide, and the role Roger Winter played in documenting the atrocities he witnessed firsthand.  

In this month’s newsletter, USCRI covers the successful discharge petition to extend Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, in a showing of rare bipartisan support to protect over 350,000 people from deportation. We are also tracking the latest arguments in the birthright citizenship case before the Supreme Court.  

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Read the Newsletter here.

 

Featured Brief 

Despite a fragile ceasefire, the Iran war continues to drive a rapidly deteriorating humanitarian crisis in Iran and across the surrounding region. At the same time, the largest energy supply disruption in modern history is producing cascading effects far beyond the Middle East, with the potential to trigger a global food emergency and other humanitarian impacts. Our most recent reporting examines a wide range of intersecting dynamics, shaping the rights and needs of displaced populations. 

USCRI expands its watchlist to ten key issues reshaping the humanitarian landscape across the Middle East and beyond. The issues fall into four categories: Displacement and Protection, Violations of International Law, Global Cascading Effects, and the Collapse of the Humanitarian Response. While current negotiations are critical to de-escalation, they do little to address the needs of displaced populations. A more people-centered response is urgently needed, and USCRI outlines five priority actions to address these gaps.  

To learn more, read the full brief here. 


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