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|
| D
Visa |
Crewmember
(Sea or Air). |
| Deferred
Inspection |
A
procedure
in which a person arriving at an airport is allowed to come into the
United States for purposes of resolving a complicated immigration
issue. This usually occurs when it is not clear to the officer at the
airport that the alien is eligible to be admitted or refused entry. |
| Department
of Labor (DOL) |
It
is the
government agency, which receives applications for Labor Certifications
and decides whether a shortage of American workers available to fill a
particular position in a U.S. company exists.
The Department
of Labor fosters and promotes the welfare of the job seekers, wage
earners, and retirees of the United States by improving their working
conditions, advancing their opportunities for profitable employment,
protecting their retirement and health care benefits, helping employers
find workers, strengthening free collective bargaining, and tracking
changes in employment, prices, and other national economic measurements. |
Department
of State
(DOS) |
The
Department of State is the lead U.S. foreign affairs agency, and the
Secretary of State is the President's principal foreign policy adviser.
The Department advances U.S. objectives and interests in shaping a
freer, more secure, and more prosperous world through its primary role
in developing and implementing the President's foreign policy. The
Department also supports the foreign affairs activities of other U.S.
Government entities including the Department of Commerce and the Agency
for International Development. It also provides an array of important
services to U.S. citizens and to foreigners seeking to visit or
immigrate to the U.S. |
| Departure
Under Safeguards |
The
departure of an illegal alien from the United States which is
physically observed by an Immigration and Naturalization Service
official. |
| Dependent |
Spouse,
and unmarried children under the age of 21. |
| Deportable
Alien |
An
alien in
and admitted to the United States subject to any grounds of removal
specified in the Immigration and Nationality Act. This includes any
alien illegally in the United States, regardless of whether the alien
entered the country by fraud or misrepresentation or entered legally
but subsequently violated the terms of his or her nonimmigrant
classification or status. |
| Deportation |
The formal
removal of an alien from the United States when the alien has been
found removable for violating the immigration laws. Deportation
is ordered by an immigration judge without any punishment being imposed
or contemplated. Prior to April 1997 deportation and exclusion were
separate removal procedures. The Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 consolidated these procedures.
After April 1, 1997, aliens in and admitted to the United States may be
subject to removal based on deportability. |
| Derivative
Citizenship |
Citizenship
conveyed to children through the naturalization
of parents or, under certain circumstances, to foreign-born children
adopted by US citizen parents, provided certain conditions are met. |
| District |
Geographic
areas into which the United States and its territories are divided for
the Immigration and Naturalization Service’s field operations or one of
three overseas offices located in Rome, Bangkok, and Mexico City.
Each
District Office, headed by a District Director, has a specified service
area that may include part of a state, an entire state, or many states.
District Offices are where most INS field staff are located. District
Offices are responsible for providing certain immigration services and
benefits to people resident in their service area, and for enforcing
immigration laws in that jurisdiction. Certain applications are filed
directly with District Offices, many kinds of interviews are conducted
at these Offices, and INS staff is available to answer questions,
provide forms, etc. |
| Diversity |
A
category
of immigrants replacing the earlier categories for nationals of
underrepresented countries and countries adversely "affected" by the
Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments of 1965 (P.L. 89-236). The
annual limit on diversity immigration was 40,000 during fiscal years
1992-94, under a transitional diversity program, and 55,000 beginning
in fiscal year 1995, under a permanent diversity program. |
| Docket
Control |
The
INS mechanism for tracking the case status of potentially removable
aliens. |
| DS-117 |
Application to Determine Returning Resident Status. |
| DS-156 |
Nonimmigrant
Visa Application. This form is required for each person traveling to
U.S. - even children and babies listed in parents' passports. |
| DS-156E |
Nonimmigrant
Treaty Trader or Treaty Investor Visa Application. |
| DS-156K |
Nonimmigrant
Fiance(e) Visa Application Supplement to Form DS-156. |
| DS-157 |
Nonimmigrant
Visa Application. All male nonimmigrant visa applicants between the
ages of 16 and 45, regardless of nationality and regardless of where
they apply, must complete and submit a DS-157 in addition to the
Nonimmigrant Visa Application
DS-156. |
| DS-169 |
Instructions
for Immigrant Visa Applicants. |
| DS-1858 |
Sponsor's
Financial Responsibility Under The Social Security Act. |
| DS-230 |
Application
for Immigrant Visa and
Alien Registration. |
| DS-3032 |
Choice
of Address and Agent for Immigrant Visa Purposes. |
| DS-3052 |
Nonimmigrant
V Visa Application. |
| DS-11 |
Application
for Passport. |
| DSP-122 |
Supplemental
Registration for the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program. |
| DS-19 |
Passport
Amendment/Validation Application. |
| DS-64 |
Statement
Regarding Lost or Stolen Passport. |
| DS-82 |
Application
for Passport by Mail. |
| Dual
Citizenship |
The
concept
of dual citizenship means that a person is a citizen of two countries
at the same time. Each country has its own citizenship laws based on
its own policy. Persons may have dual nationality by automatic
operation of different laws rather than by choice. For example, a child
born in a foreign country to U.S. citizen parents may be both a U.S.
citizen and a citizen of the country of birth. |
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