Title
Disasters and Immigration. What U.S. Law Actually Does (Fernando Soccol)
Tipo de registro
Video
Contact
Fernando Socol
Year
2,022
Publisher
Imara IHG

Summary
Fernando Socol explains how U.S. immigration law addresses disasters through tools like Temporary Protected Status (TPS), asylum, and humanitarian waivers. The talk clarifies legal eligibility, the impact of family separation, and the role of specialized visas in national interest and recovery.
Description
In this guest lecture, Fernando Socol, a U.S. immigration attorney based in Miami, explains how U.S. immigration law responds to sudden disasters—and what emergency management professionals should understand about the legal tools, constraints, and real-world implications.
The session distinguishes between slow-onset climate-driven movement and sudden disasters (hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanic events), then focuses on the U.S. legal mechanisms that shape protection, eligibility, and timelines.

Topics covered:
* Temporary Protected Status (TPS): what it is, who qualifies, and why it doesn’t bring new arrivals
* Refugee status vs asylum: where each applies, eligibility basics, and processing realities
* Humanitarian impacts for families: why TPS often creates cross-border family separation
* USCIS flexibility: limited case-by-case accommodations (extensions, status changes)
* National Interest Waiver / Extraordinary Ability (EB-2 NIW / EB-1): pathways for specialized talent and “national interest” contributions
* U.S. citizens abroad in disasters: preparedness steps and the role of U.S. embassies (e.g., traveler registration)
* Operational reality: how long these processes can take and what “waiting in place” means legally and socially

This lecture is designed for students and practitioners interested in whole-community planning, equity in disaster response, and the cross-border drivers of vulnerability that affect communities inside the U.S.