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| P-1
Visa |
Internationally
Recognized Athlete or Member of Internationally Recognized
Entertainment Group. |
| P-2
Visa |
Artist
or Entertainer in a Reciprocal Exchange Program. |
| P-3
Visa |
Artist
or Entertainer in a Culturally Unique Program. |
| P-4
Visa |
Spouse
or Child of P-1, P-2, or P-3. |
| Panama
Canal Act Immigrants |
Three
categories of special immigrants established by Public Law 96-70 (Act
of 9/27/79): 1) certain former employees of the Panama Canal Company or
Canal Zone Government, their spouses and accompanying children; 2)
certain former employees of the US Government in the Panama Canal Zone
who are Panamanian nationals, their spouses and children; and 3)
certain former employees of the Panama Canal Company or Canal Zone
Government on April 1, 1979, their spouses and children. The Act
provides for admission of a maximum of 15,000 immigrants, at a rate of
no more than 5,000 each year. |
| Parolee |
A
parolee is an alien, appearing to be inadmissible to the inspecting
officer, allowed into the United States for urgent humanitarian reasons
or when that alien's entry is determined to be for significant public
benefit. Parole does not constitute a formal admission to the United
States and confers temporary status only, requiring parolees to leave
when the conditions supporting their parole cease to exist. Types of
parolees include:
1) Deferred inspection: authorized at the port
upon alien's arrival; may be conferred by an immigration inspector when
aliens appear at a port of entry with documentation, but after
preliminary examination, some question remains about their
admissibility which can best be answered at their point of destination.
2) Advance parole:
authorized at an INS District office in advance of alien's arrival; may
be issued to aliens residing in the United States in other than lawful
permanent resident status who have an unexpected need to travel and
return, and whose conditions of stay do not otherwise allow for
readmission to the United States if they depart.
3)
Port-of-entry parole: authorized at the port upon alien's arrival;
applies to a wide variety of situations and is used at the discretion
of the supervisory immigration inspector, usually to allow short
periods of entry. Examples include allowing aliens who could not be
issued the necessary documentation within the required time period, or
who were otherwise inadmissible, to attend a funeral and permitting the
entry of emergency workers, such as fire fighters, to assist with an
emergency.
4) Humanitarian parole: authorized at INS
headquarters or overseas District Offices for "urgent humanitarian
reasons" specified in the law. It is used in cases of medical emergency
and comparable situations.
5) Significant Public Benefit Parole:
authorized at INS headquarters for "significant public benefit"
specified in the law. It is generally used for aliens who enter to take
part in legal proceedings.
6) Overseas parole: authorized at an
INS District or suboffice while the alien is still overseas; designed
to constitute long-term admission to the United States. In recent
years, most of the aliens the INS has processed through overseas parole
have arrived under special legislation or international migration
agreements. |
| Per-Country
Limit |
The
maximum number of family-sponsored and employment-based preference
visas that can be issued to citizens of any country in a fiscal year.
The limits are calculated each fiscal year depending on the total
number of family-sponsored and employment-based visas
available. No more than 7 percent of the visas may be issued to natives
of any one independent country in a fiscal year; no more than 2 percent
may issued to any one dependency of any independent country. The
per-country limit does not indicate, however, that a country is
entitled to the maximum number of visas each year, just that it cannot
receive more than that number. Because of the combined workings of the
preference system and per-country limits, most countries do not reach
this level of visa issuance. |
| Permanent
Resident Alien |
An
alien admitted to the United States as a lawful permanent resident.
Permanent residents are also commonly referred to as immigrants;
however, the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) broadly defines an
immigrant as any alien in the United States, except one legally
admitted under specific nonimmigrant categories (INA section
101(a)(15)). An illegal alien who entered the United States without
inspection, for example, would be strictly defined as an immigrant
under the INA but is not a permanent resident alien. Lawful permanent
residents are legally accorded the privilege of residing permanently in
the United States. They may be issued immigrant visas by the Department
of State overseas or adjusted to permanent resident status by the
Immigration and Naturalization Service in the United States. |
| Petition |
A
petition, for immigration purposes, is a formal request made to the
INS to legally recognize a foreign national as qualified for a Green
Card or a nonimmigrant visa category. |
| Petitioner |
Petitioner
is a person or business who makes the formal request that
the foreign national be legally recognized as qualified for a Green
Card or nonimmigrant visa category. For family based petitions, the
petitioning relative must be a U.S. citizen or a Green Card holder. For
employment based petitions, the petitioner must be a U.S. employer. |
| Port
of Entry |
Any
location in the United States or its territories that is designated as
a point of entry for aliens and US citizens. All district and files
control offices are also considered ports, since they become locations
of entry for aliens adjusting to immigrant status. |
| Preference
Categories |
The
categories among which the family-sponsored and employment-based
immigrant preference visas are distributed are:
1. The family-sponsored preferences
are:
a) Unmarried sons and daughters of U.S.
citizens
b) Spouses, children, and unmarried sons
and daughters of permanent
resident
aliens
c) Married sons and daughters of U.S.
citizens
d) Brothers and sisters of U.S. citizens
2. The employment-based
preferences are:
a) Priority workers (persons of
extraordinary ability,
outstanding
professors and researchers, and
certain multinational
executives and
managers)
b) Professionals with advanced degrees
or aliens with exceptional
ability
c) Skilled workers, professionals (without
advanced degrees), and needed
unskilled workers
d) Special immigrants
e) Employment creation immigrants
(investors)
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| Preference
Relatives
|
People
who want to become immigrants are classified into categories based on a
preference system. The immediate relatives
of U.S. citizens, which includes parents, spouses and unmarried
children under the age of 21, do not have to wait for an immigrant visa
number to become available once the visa petition filed for them is
approved by the INS. The relatives in the remaining categories must
wait for an immigrant visa number to become available according to the
following preferences:
• First Preference: Unmarried, adult sons
and daughters of U.S. citizens. Adult
means 21 years of age or older.
• Second Preference: Spouses of lawful
permanent residents, their unmarried
children (under twenty-one), and the
unmarried sons and daughters of lawful
permanent residents.
• Third Preference: Married sons and
daughters of U.S. citizens.
• Fourth Preference: Brothers and sisters
of adult U.S. citizens. |
Preference
System
(Immigration Act of 1990) |
The
nine categories since fiscal year 1992 among which the family-sponsored
and employment-based
immigrant preference visas are distributed. The family-sponsored
preferences are: 1) unmarried sons and daughters of US citizens; 2)
spouses, children, and unmarried sons and daughters of permanent
resident aliens; 3) married sons and daughters of US citizens; 4)
brothers and sisters of US citizens. The employment-based preferences
are: 1) priority workers (persons of extraordinary ability, outstanding
professors and researchers, and certain multinational executives and
managers); 2) professionals with advanced degrees or aliens with
exceptional ability; 3) skilled workers, professionals (without
advanced degrees), and needed unskilled workers; 4) special immigrants;
and 5) employment creation immigrants (investors). |
Preference
System
(prior to fiscal year 1992) |
The
six categories among which 270,000 immigrant visa numbers were
distributed each year during the period 1981-91. This preference system
was amended by the Immigration Act of 1990, effective fiscal year 1992.
(see Preference System - Immigration Act of 1990). The six categories
were: 1) unmarried sons and daughters (over 21 years of age) of US
citizens (20 percent); 2) spouses and unmarried sons and daughters of
aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence (26 percent); 3)
members of the professions or persons of exceptional ability in the
sciences and arts (10 percent); 4) married sons and daughters of US
citizens (10 percent); 5) brothers and sisters of US citizens over 21
years of age (24 percent); and 6) needed skilled or unskilled workers
(10 percent). A nonpreference category, historically open to immigrants
not entitled to a visa number under one of the six preferences just
listed, had no numbers available beginning in September 1978. |
| Pre-inspection |
Complete
immigration inspection of airport passengers before departure from a
foreign country. No further immigration inspection is required upon
arrival in the United States other than submission of INS Form I-94 for
nonimmigrant aliens. |
| Principal
Alien |
The
alien who applies for immigrant status and from whom another alien may
derive lawful status under immigration law or regulations (usually
spouses and minor unmarried children). |
| Priority
Date |
In
the INS Immigrant visa petition application process, the priority date
is the date the petition was filed. If the alien relative has a
priority date on or before the date listed in the visa bulletin, then
he or she is currently eligible for a visa. |
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