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Policy and Advocacy Newsletter

May 21, 2026

Since our last newsletter, the Policy & Advocacy team has continued to spotlight urgent refugee and immigration issues through research, advocacy, and public engagement. The team collaborated with USCRI’s Refugee Health team to emphasize the importance of strong health coverage through Refugee Medical Assistance. We issued a statement urging DHS to withdraw a proposed rule that would effectively halt asylum seekers’ access to work permits. The team analyzed the potential nationwide impact of a major Supreme Court case that could affect millions of people under the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program and joined advocates at the Supreme Court in support of TPS. The team also highlighted the legacy of refugee protections through a feature on the Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman, who was instrumental in passage of the 1980 Refugee Act. 

In this month’s newsletter, USCRI covers the Supreme Court case on TPS for Haiti and Syria, the English language proficiency requirement for truck drivers, the Title 42 order announced by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) following an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda, as well as reports of an expansion of the refugee admissions ceiling. The team also tracks unprecedented levels of internal displacement worldwide, how drone warfare in Sudan is now the leading cause of civilian death, escalating violence in South Sudan, Cuba’s ongoing humanitarian crisis, and how Europe is shifting its approach towards migration and deportation enforcement.

 The work of USCRI’s Policy and Advocacy team is only possible with support from people like you — please consider supporting our work today to help us continue advancing protections and solutions for refugees and immigrants worldwide. Thank you! 

Read the Newsletter here.

 

Featured Brief 

Around the world, millions of refugee and displaced children are growing up in crises that receive little global attention, despite facing immense hardship, trauma, and uncertainty. In places like the Musenyi and Busuma refugee camps in Burundi, children who have fled violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are navigating interrupted childhoods marked by displacement, family separation, and limited access to education and essential services. 

In this month’s featured brief, USCRI Policy Analyst, Victoria Walker, partnered with the Legal Refugee Center (LRC) and their team in Burundi to highlight an urgent education crisis for thousands of children in Busuma and Musenyi refugee camps.  

A version of this piece, along with other recent USCRI pieces and original reporting, will be featured in USCRI’s forthcoming child-focused report, Their Future, Their Voice: Centering Displaced Children in Global Protection and Policy, which includes a joint call for increasing education access for refugee children. The report is due for release in mid-June before World Refugee Day.

Read the full brief here.


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