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Outstanding Professors and Researchers: A Closer Look

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Title: Outstanding Professors and Researchers: A Closer Look


1
Outstanding Professors and Researchers A
Closer Look
  • Connie Burk, U. T. Health Science Center
    (cburk_at_utmem.edu)
  • Terry Eiesland, Emory University
    (teiesla_at_emory.edu)
  • Steve Springer, David Ware Associates
    (steve_at_david-ware.com)
  • NAFSA Region VII ConferenceAtlanta, GA
  • October 27, 2007

2
Presentation Outline
  • Overview of the outstanding professor or
    researcher category
  • Quick review of EB LPR Process and categories
  • Criteria and observations
  • Advantages/Disadvantages
  • Advising Considerations
  • Policies and practices

3
Review of Employment-Based LPR
  • Some Key Concepts
  • With a few exceptions
  • Employer petitions USCIS to obtain permanent
    residence for Employee
  • So its not the employee who files the petition,
    its the employer
  • If labor certification is pursued, the employer
    files that, with
  • U. S. Dept. of Labor, too
  • Final step in the process requires an application
    (adjustment of status) by the employee
  • Spouse and unmarried minor children may join in
    this application
  • Full-time job of indefinite duration generally
    required
  • Two-step or three-step process, depending on
    category

4
  • EB LPR Categories
  • Each year 140,000 places allocated among five
    categories, called preferences
  • First Preference (EB-1)
  • Aliens with extraordinary ability
  • Outstanding professors and researchers
  • Certain multinational executives and managers
  • Second Preference (EB-2)
  • Members of the professions holding advanced
    degrees
  • Aliens of exceptional ability
  • Third Preference (EB-3)
  • Professionals and skilled workers
  • Other workers
  • Fourth Preference (EB-4) Certain special
    immigrants

5
  • Overview Eligibility for OPR Classification
  • At least three years of teaching or research
    experience in the field
  • Permanent position
  • Tenure-track or tenured teaching position
  • Comparable research position
  • Recognized internationally as outstanding
  • Evidence of at least two of the following
  • receipt of major prizes or awards for outstanding
    achievement
  • membership in organization that requires
    outstanding achievement
  • published material about the aliens work
  • participation, individually or on a panel,
    judging the work of others

6
Experience
  • The Statute INA 203(b)(1)(B)(ii)
  • The alien has at least 3 years of experience in
    teaching or research in the academic area
  • The Regulations 8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(ii)
  • Evidence that the alien has at least three years
    of experience in teaching and/or research in the
    academic field
  • Experience in teaching or research while working
    on an advanced degree will only be acceptable . .
    . if he/she had full responsibility for the class
    taught or if the research . . . has been
    recognized within the academic field as
    outstanding
  • Evidence . . . shall be in the form of letter(s)
    from current or former employer(s) and shall
    include . . . a specific description of the
    duties performed by the alien

7
Experience Observations
  • USCIS seems reasonably open-minded about evidence
    of required experience
  • Some employers submit only c.v.
  • Others submit letter from current supervisor or
    other of employers representative
  • Others carefully document with letters from prior
    employers, explaining teaching and research
    duties in a manner to meet the specific
    requirements stated in the regulations
  • If relying on experience as graduate student,
    which is not uncommon, its probably best to
    address directly the regulatory requirements that
    the beneficiary had full responsibility for the
    teaching or that the research has been recognized
    as outstanding

8
The Position
  • Statute INA 203(b)(1)(B)(iii) the alien seeks to
    enter the U.S.
  • (I) for a tenured position (or tenure-track
    position) within a university or institution of
    higher education to teach in the academic area
  • (II) for a comparable position with a university
    or institution of higher education to conduct
    research in the area
  • Regulations 8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(iii) The offer of
    employment shall be in the form of a letter
    from
  • (A) A U. S. university or institution of higher
    learning offering the alien a tenured or
    tenure-track teaching position in the alien's
    academic field, or
  • (B) A U. S. university or institution of higher
    learning offering the alien a permanent research
    position in the alien's academic field
  • 204.5(i)(2) definitions
  • Academic field means a body of specialized
    knowledge offered for study at an accredited U.
    S. university or institution of higher education.
  • Permanent, in reference to a research position,
    means either tenured, tenure-track, or for a term
    of indefinite or unlimited duration, and in which
    the employee will ordinarily have an expectation
    of continued employment unless there is good
    cause for termination

9
The Position Observations
  • Note neither statute nor regulations require
    full-time position (institutional policy might)
  • Position and function dont have to strictly
    match
  • Most petitions based on outstanding research,
    even for professors
  • Usually simplest to assert that beneficiary is
    outstanding professor or researcher (as the
    statute and regs. read) and let USCIS decide
    which experience qualifies
  • Neither the statute nor the regulations specify
    that an outstanding professor must be offered a
    position as a professor and vice-versa. There
    appears to be nothing to preclude the petitioner
    from offering an outstanding researcher a
    position as a professor and from offering an
    outstanding professor a position as a researcher
    (Skerret Letter 03/02/1994)

10
  • Problems of permanence
  • Dont confuse the criteria for professors with
    those for researchers
  • Professor positions only require proof that
    position is tenure-track or tenured
  • Job offer letter or contract
  • TSC seems willing to accept letter from employer
    to USCIS
  • Research positions these are more difficult
  • Require employment for a term of indefinite or
    unlimited duration, in which the employee will
    ordinarily have an expectation of continued
    employment unless there is good cause for
    termination (8 CFR 204.5(i) (2))
  • Offer of employment shall be in the form of a
    letter from . . . a U. S. university or
    institution of higher learning offering the alien
    a permanent research position in the alien's
    academic field (8CFR204.5(i)(3)(iii) (B))
  • NSC interprets to require job offer letter to the
    employee clearly stating that permanent
    employment is offered
  • TSC has taken more reasonable approach, realizing
    that such letters generally conflict with
    institutional policies, standard employer
    practices (esp. In employment-at-will states)

11
Internationally Recognized
  • Statute the alien is recognized internationally
    as outstanding in a specific academic area (INA
    203(b)(1)(B)(i))
  • Regulation Evidence that the professor or
    researcher is recognized internationally as
    outstanding in the academic field specified in
    the petition. Such evidence shall consist of at
    least two of the following (8CFR204.5(i)(3)(i))

12
Internationally Recognized Observations
  • Some commentators believe that the regulations
    were written so that simply submitting evidence
    in any two categories is sufficient
  • USCIS seems to be of two minds about this
  • Simply performing in the criteria categories
    indicates outstandingness
  • 6/30/1992 Weinig Letter . . . peer-reviewed
    presentations at academic symposia or
    peer-reviewed articles in scholarly journals,
    testimony from other scholars on how the alien
    has contributed to the academic field, entries
    (particularly a good number) in a citation index
    which cite the aliens work as authoritative in
    the field, or participation by the alien as a
    reviewer for a peer-reviewed scholarly journal
    would more than likely be solid pieces of
    evidence. We are also inclined to believe that
    thesis direction (particularly of a Ph.D. thesis)
    would demonstrate the aliens outstanding ability
    to judge the work of others.
  • The performance itself must be outstanding to
    establish outstandingness
  • 6/15/1995 Skerret Letter The overall impression
    should be that the alien fits the classification.
    Mere presentation of evidence which relates to
    two of the listed criteria does not guarantee an
    approval.
  • RFEs/NOIDs often indicate that USCIS expects
    evidence in at least two categories showing that
    beneficiary stands out among those in the field
    (they argue that this is implied rather than
    stated in the regulation/statute), so this
    requires outstanding publication, outstanding
    judging, outstanding subject of publications by
    others, etc.
  • Safest to assume you must prove beneficiary
    outstanding in at least two categories

13
  • At least two, means TWO, though many suspect that
    USCIS looks for strong evidence in MORE than two
    categories (see 6/30/1992 Weinig Letter,
    indicating necessity to meet 3 criteria)
  • Careful definition of specific academic area is
    crucial
  • Definition provided at 204.5(i)(2) is quite
    broad, so be creative
  • Easier to show outstandingness and recognition
    among those in a narrowly defined specialty, like
    the plant pathogen genetics than a broadly
    defined one like biology
  • Clear explanation of the beneficiarys work,
    which may be easily understood by a layperson, is
    essential, and you may have to assist with this
  • Late addition to slides Legal standard
    preponderance of the evidence not beyond a
    reasonable doubt (see 5/3/06 Divine memo)

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15
Prizes and Awards
  • Documentation of the alien's receipt of major
    prizes or awards for outstanding achievement in
    the academic field (8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(i)(A))
  • Observations
  • AAO decisions have indicated that student prizes,
    awards, and fellowships do not meet this
    criterion teaching assistant awards, deans
    list, elected student leadership positions,
    examination scores, travel grants, and even
    research grants
  • USCIS reads major to mean international
  • Rare for those young enough in their career
    that they would be seeking permanent residence
  • Grant awards
  • Dont fall neatly into any of the categories of
    evidence, but can be powerful evidence
  • Some argue that receiving a large sum of money is
    even more indicative of an outstanding reputation
    than other awards
  • Many are based on prior achievements and
    carefully peer-reviewed

16
Memberships
  • Documentation of the alien's membership in
    associations in the academic field which require
    outstanding achievements of their members (8 CFR
    204.5(i)(3)(i)(B))
  • Observations
  • NOT simply professional associations in which
    membership is granted for the payment of a
    membership fee (save your paper)
  • AAO decisions indicate that this criterion
    includes the most prestigious associations, such
    as the National Academy of Sciences, which are
    extremely restrictive in their membership
    requirements
  • . . . while a meritorious distinction based on
    peer recommendations, it has no been demonstrated
    that only those with outstanding achievements are
    eligible . . . (recent NOID)
  • Still, submit proof of membership in any
    organization which requires nomination and
    election or any kind of achievement
  • MUST show criteria for membership, even if they
    should be obvious to USCIS

17
Publications about the Alien
  • Published material in professional publications
    written by others about the alien's work in the
    academic field. Such material shall include the
    title, date, and author of the material, and any
    necessary translation (8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(i)(C))
  • Observations
  • USCIS seems to believe that they must be at the
    national or international level, rather than in
    community newspapers or the universitys
    publications, but even articles in major regional
    newspapers may be unusual enough to be
    influential
  • Standard academic citations (especially passing
    citations) do not suffice
  • The record indicates that the beneficiarys work
    has been cited 24 times. While this shows a
    small level of recognition, this citation record
    does not reflect that the beneficiarys
    publication history is indicative of or uniquely
    consistent with international recognition
    (recent NOID)
  • small level of recognition does not satisfy
    regulation that simply requires recognition?
  • What about, say, 200 citations, 100 citations to
    one article?
  • Many petitioners include them, regardless, since
    they are often impressive
  • Articles based on or dealing with the authors
    work in any detail may be powerful
  • Organized list of citations and copies of
    articles or at least title and citation pages

18
Judging the Work of Others
  • Evidence of the alien's participation, either
    individually or on a panel, as the judge of the
    work of others in the same or an allied academic
    field (8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(i)(D))
  • Observations
  • USCIS seems to be pretty open-minded and
    reasonable in accepting a wide variety of
    evidence, even informal
  • Thank you letters and even e-mail messages from
    journals or grant-funding institutions
  • Dont forget conference panels, conference
    organizing panels (reviewing submissions/proposals
    ), editorial boards
  • Recent RFEs indicating that reviewing journal
    submissions is not necessarily indicative of
    international recognition, as this is an activity
    in which many academics routinely engage.
  • Reviewing dissertations is probably not useful
  • Although the regulation, standard practice, and
    common sense would indicate that simply being
    asked to review the work of peers would satisfy
    this criterion, USCIS does not always agree
  • A vast majority of published researcher (sic.)
    perform such duties peer-review for journals .
    . . and there is nothing to indicate that the
    beneficiarys participation . . . Exceeds that of
    other researchers or reflects international
    recognition . . . (recent NOID)
  • 6/30/1992 Weinig Letter indicates that judging
    dissertations would qualify (dont count on it)

19
Original Contributions
  • Evidence of the alien's original scientific or
    scholarly research contributions to the academic
    field (8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(i)(E))
  • Observations
  • Generally, this is best established through
    expert opinion letters
  • Careful to avoid standard recommendation letters
  • Often very helpful for scholar to propose a draft
    for the writer (if not the qualitative part, at
    least the facts)
  • Writer should include c.v. or a biographical
    paragraph or two in the letter
  • Obviously letters from other countries can be
    useful (international recognition)
  • Need not be only from academics
  • Writers not closely associated are considered
    most objective, but those closely associated
    often provide best information (avoid having only
    local letters)
  • Whats the magic number???

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21
Publications by the Alien
  • Evidence of the alien's authorship of scholarly
    books or articles (in scholarly journals with
    international circulation) in the academic field
    (8 CFR 204.5(i)(3)(i)(F))
  • Observations
  • As in other categories, USCIS looks for
    distinction
  • Expert opinion letters can discuss significance
    of publications and record
  • Seminal articles and widely used books especially
    powerful
  • Citation record can help establish distinction
  • ISI ranks journals, and many journals rank most
    downloaded articles
  • Because the goal of the regulatory criteria is
    to demonstrate that the beneficiary has won
    international recognition . . . it stands to
    reason that the beneficiarys research would have
    won comparable recognition. (recent NOID)
  • The Association of American Universities
    Committee on Postdoctoral Education . . . set
    forth in its definition of a postdoctoral
    appointment that the appointment is viewed as
    preparatory for a full-time academic and/or
    research career . . . and that the appointee is
    expected to publish the results of his or her
    research or scholarship during the period of
    appointment. Since it indicates that
    publication is expected this report reinforces
    the Services position that scholarly publication
    is not automatically evidence of international
    recognition. (recent NOID)

22
General Observations
  • Although the statute and regulations would
    indicate that simply presenting evidence in
    several categories would add up to outstanding,
    USCIS seems to require clear proof in at least
    two categories that beneficiary stands out among
    peers
  • Although it shouldnt be, it may be more
    difficult to establish outstandingness in
    humanities than sciences
  • Dont assume any knowledge on the part of USCIS
    concerning academia, criteria for memberships or
    publication, prestige of organizations, etc.
  • Assume that if you have not provided documentary
    proof, you have not established a fact simply
    by stating it (USCIS trusts documents more than
    petitioner statements)
  • Expert opinion letters are among most powerful
    evidence, but scholars will need guidance in
    obtaining them and in necessary content (they
    will get general job recommendation letters if
    you dont advise otherwise)
  • A summary letter or memo (along with table of
    contents and tabbed exhibits) can be extremely
    helpful and allow you to emphasize evidence you
    consider most useful, but this labor-intensive
  • Other?

23
Advantages / Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Bypass labor certification process
  • Recent DOL rule requires employer to pay all
    costs associated with labor certification
  • Especially professional occupation process for
    researchers
  • For extremely focused scholar, can be quickly
    prepared and filed in case of emergency to
    protect work authorization
  • Can be good option for professor if special
    handling criteria not met
  • EB-1 rarely backlogs
  • Especially scholars from India and China may have
    reason to prefer EB-1
  • Disadvantages
  • Extensive documentation required

24
Advising Considerations
  • The decision to/not to pursue the outstanding
    route
  • May not be good first choice for those eligible
    for special handling labor certification
  • For professors, labor certification is relatively
    quick and simple
  • Collection of evidence for outstanding petition
    can take longer than labor certification
  • Missed 18 month window, failed to run print ad,
    institution or professor refuses re-recruitment?
  • Outstanding route may require much more
    advising than special handling route
  • For researchers, labor certification more
    difficult, but unlikely to have many applicants
  • EB-2 backlogs and actual vs. perceived need to
    rush
  • Scholars with aging-out children may find EB-1
    attractive as filing AOS may gain protections
    provided by Child Status Protection Act
  • In emergencies, may be possible to file
    concurrently I-140 and I-485, with applications
    for EAD and advance parole, to protect work
    authorization

25
November Visa Bulletin
26
Institutional Policies and Practices
  • Institutional Policies
  • Who may be sponsored
  • All positions, only faculty positions, etc.?
  • Driven by IO staffing and ability to use outside
    counsel, financial constraints, shortages of
    employees
  • Institutional Practices
  • Some institutions mandate or prefer either EB-1
    or EB-2
  • Again, may be driven by IO staffing and ability
    to use outside counsel, financial constraints,
    shortages of employees, willingness of HR to
    re-recruit for position that has already been
    filled
  • New DOL rule preventing employee from paying
    legal fees/costs for labor certification may
    cause some employers to require researchers to
    pursue the outstanding process rather than
    labor certification
  • Processes for deciding to pursue EB-1, gathering
    evidence, etc.

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