This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with The Local Choice

Your EAP offers these great resources.

Asylum or Refugee Status: Who Is Eligible?

If you've fled your home country and are afraid to go back, you may qualify for asylum or refugee status in the U.S.

Asylum and refugee status are special legal protections available to people who have left their home country for their own safety and are afraid to return.

What's the difference between asylum and refugee status under U.S. immigration laws that is, who should seek asylum status, and who should seek refugee status? It's simply a matter of where you are when you apply. People outside of the United States must apply for refugee status. People who have already made it to the United States border or the interior (perhaps by using a visa or by entering illegally) can apply for asylum status.

Once granted, both statuses allow you to stay in the United States indefinitely. Asylees and refugees are given permission to work and are allowed to apply for a green card (within one year of either entering the United States as a refugee or being approved for asylum).

But not everyone qualifies for asylum or refugee status. You must meet some strict requirements, as described in this article. In particular, you must show two things:

  • You are unable or unwilling to return to your home country because you have been persecuted there in the past or have a well-founded fear that you will be persecuted if you go back.
  • The reason you have been (or will be) persecuted is connected to one of five things: your race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or your political opinion.

Let's look more closely at what these requirements mean.

What Is Persecution?

Persecution means to harass, punish, injure, oppress, or otherwise cause someone to suffer physical or psychological harm.

U.S. immigration law does not list specific examples of the kinds of persecution that would qualify someone for asylum or refugee status. However, from the law that has been developed through court cases, we know that it can include such acts as threats, violence, torture, inappropriate imprisonment, or denial of basic human rights or freedoms.

Historically, the need for asylum or refugee status has been recognized in situations where a foreign government has:

  • imprisoned and tortured political dissidents
  • fired on protesters
  • commited genocide against a certain race, or
  • made sure that members of a certain religion were left out of the political process.

Even if a foreign government stands by while someone else commits acts of persecution for example, if the authorities are unwilling or unable to exercise control while members of a vigilante squad gang up on gays and lesbians or while members of a guerilla group threaten or kidnap people who won't voluntarily join them this too can qualify as persecution, which would support asylum or refugee status.

There is one type of persecution that is actually listed in the law: Being forced to undergo (or the fear of being forced to undergo) a program of "coercive population control." This specific protection is aimed at victims of the kind of forced abortion and sterilization that takes place in mainland China.

Just remember that the persecution must be connected to one of five grounds race, religion, nationality, membership in a social group, or political opinion discussed in more detail below. For example, violence directed against gays and lesbians is recognized as persecution connected to membership in a social group. But violence against an individual who happens to have angered a local criminal does not have the necessary connection to one of the five grounds, so a victim of that kind of persecution wouldn't be eligible for asylum or refugee status from the U.S. government.

In recent years, the U.S. government has recognized persecution based on gender (usually based on the "particular social group" category). This has allowed some women to gain asylum based on having undergone (or fearing they'll be forced to undergo) cultural practices such as female genital cutting, forced marriage, or domestic violence.

What Do the Five Grounds of Persecution Mean?

As mentioned above, the U.S. government won't grant asylum or refugee status to a person unless they are suffering (or fearing) persecution that's based on one of five grounds. The first three grounds race, religion, and nationality are fairly self explanatory. Let's look at the remaining two grounds political opinion and membership in a particular social group since they aren't always as clear.

Political opinion. Persecution of this kind means that you hold opinions that the authorities don't tolerate, most likely opinions that are critical of their policies or methods. Of course, you would need to show that the authorities know about your opinions otherwise, they'd have no reason to persecute you. It will help if you have, for example, spoken in public, written about your criticisms, or taken part in anti-government protests. For example, people have proven persecution for political opinion based on having taken part in student demonstrations, been active in labor unions, advocated independence for a particular ethnic group, or joined an opposition political party.

You can also qualify for asylum or refugee status based on political opinion if the authorities mistakenly assume you hold certain opinions, perhaps based on some other personal characteristic like your religion or family group. (This is called "imputed political opinion.") 

Membership in a particular social group. This category is the most difficult of the five to define, and is the subject of many legal arguments. A social group is sometimes said to mean an identifiable group of people whose government views it as a threat. Or it is described as a group sharing a common characteristic that is so fundamental to their individual identities that the members cannot or should not be expected to change it. 

Examples of particular social groups whose members have been accepted as asylees or refugees by the U.S. government include tribes or ethnic groups, social classes (such as educated elite), family members of dissidents, occupational groups, homosexuals, members or former members of the police or military (who may be targeted for assassination), and, in some cases, women.

If You Think You're Eligible for Asylum

Even if you think you're eligible for asylum or refugee protection in the United States you've experienced persecution based on one of the five grounds you can still be barred from receiving asylum or refugee status. Find out more in Nolo's article Bars to Receiving Asylum or Refugee Status. For in-depth information on asylum and refugee protections and all key immigration law issues, see Nolo's book U.S. Immigration Made Easy by Ilona Bray (Nolo).

Determining eligibility and applying for asylum or refugee status isn't easy. Start by talking with an experienced attorney, if possible. Some nonprofit organizations will provide free or low-cost attorneys to low-income applicants. Or you can use Nolo's Lawyer Directory to find an experienced immigration attorney near you.

http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/asylum-or-refugee-status-who-32298.html

More about this Topics

  • Vaccine Injuries: The Federal Compensation Program

  • The Organ Donor: A Guide

  • Automobile Service Contracts: Are They Worth it?

  • Travel Insurance: The Benefits and Limitations

  • Leasing a Car

Other Topics

    • Small Claims Court: Part 2
    • Consumer Tips on Funerals
    • Employment: Consumer Tips
    • Repairs, Recalls, "Lemon" Laws and Secret Warranties
    • Travel: Consumer Tips
    • Demand Letters: The Basics
    • Employee Rights Under OSHA (the Occupational Safety and Health Act)
    • Medicare Part D Prescription Drug Coverage: The Basics
    • Proving a Defective Product Liability Claim
    • When Is an ISP Liable for the Acts of Its Subscribers?