The ultimate green card guide
The U.S. immigration system is an enormous bureaucracy, so it’s vital that you understand it before attempting to apply for a green card. Making a mistake can lead to delays and hassles or even ruin your chances for success.
How to Get a Green Card provides everything you need to know about qualifying for permanent U.S. residence if you don’t have an employer sponsoring you.
Find out how to work with U.S. officials and prepare and present the right documents at the right time to get a green card through:
• parents, siblings, or adult children
• a U.S. spouse or fiancé
• green card lotteries (diversity visa)
• political asylum or refugee status
• a U visa for crime victims, or
• another category you might qualify for.
The 16th edition covers the latest income requirements for family-based green card applicants, additions to the list of countries whose citizens may obtain Temporary Protected Status, and more.
Tabella dei contenuti
Your Immigration Companion 1. Immigration Then and Now 2. All the Ways to Get a Green Card 3. Short-Term Alternatives to a Green Card 4. Will Inadmissibility Bar You From Getting a Green Card? 5. How Long You’ll Have to Wait 6. Fiancé and Fiancée Visas 7. Green Cards Through Marriage 8. Your Parents as Immigrants 9. Child Immigrants 10. Orphan Immigrants in Non-Hague-Convention Countries 11. The Diversity Visa Lottery 12. Your Brothers and Sisters as Immigrants 13. Refugees and Political Asylees 14. Military Veterans and Enlistees 15. Cancellation of Removal: Do Ten Illegal Years Equal One Green Card? 16. Adjustment of Status 17. Consular Processing 18. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals 19. U Visas for Crime Victims Assisting Law Enforcement 20. Acquiring Citizenship Through U.S. Citizen Parents 21. Filling Out and Submitting Immigration Applications 22. Tracking Your Application Through the System 23. Keeping, Renewing, and Replacing Your Green Card 24. How to Find and Work With a Lawyer Index
Circa l’autore
Ilona Bray, J.D. is an award-winning author and legal editor at Nolo, specializing in immigration law, real estate, and nonprofit fundraising. Many of her books are consistent Nolo bestsellers, among them Effective Fundraising for Nonprofits, U.S. Immigration Made Easy, and Nolo’s Essential Guide to Buying Your First Home. She particularly enjoys interviewing people and weaving their stories into her books.
Bray’s working background includes solo practice, nonprofit, and corporate stints, as well as long periods of volunteering, including an internship at Amnesty International’s main legal office in London. She received her law degree and a Master’s degree in East Asian (Chinese) Studies from the University of Washington. In her spare time she enjoys writing children’s books, going to open houses, and gardening.