Brooklyn Immigration Resources and Legal Aid
Immigration is a difficult journey. Immigrants may encounter major obstacles to their stability and success if they do not receive professional counsel. Local legal service providers who offer free immigration-related legal assistance as well as support with important applications and appearances have been granted funds by ONA. Kindly use the list or map provided below to locate a provider in your area.
The Legal Aid Society
Unit of Immigration Law
Immigrants make up a significant portion of our local economy and comprise one of the largest immigrant populations in the nation, in Brooklyn. Entrepreneurs, innovators, and family maintainers are all being fueled by immigration. However, individuals must overcome formidable obstacles in order to achieve citizenship and economic security. By lowering the backlog, legal representation not only guarantees that immigrants receive substantive hearings in immigration courts, but it also increases the efficiency of these systems. The staff of the Immigration Law Unit represents applicants for U.S. visas, T visas, SIJS, green cards, citizenship, work authorization, asylum, VAWA self-petitions, abusive spouse waivers, and a host of other affirmative immigration advantages. Attorneys and other advocates can receive immigration-related training from the Immigration Defense Project, which also engages in impact litigation, policy, and advocacy. The Padilla Support Center is a part of the state's network of regional immigration help centers (criminal and family court cases) and provides individual consultations with immigration consequences to attorneys assigned through New York City's Assigned Counsel Plan (18-B attorneys). All of this is on top of offering direct representation in federal courts and before the EOIR Board of Immigration Appeals.
The Immigration Project on Domestic Violence
Significant obstacles frequently stand in the way of immigrant survivors of gender-based violence being safe and free from abuse. They fear the police, are inexperienced with the legal system, and lack the ability to resist the control of an abusive relationship. Furthermore, they frequently lack documentation, which leaves them open to incarceration for immigration violations and enforcement activities, in addition to their inability to obtain legal employment in the country. Immigrant women and children who are in abusive relationships can receive a range of immigration relief services from the Domestic Violence Immigration Project. These consist of applications for green cards, U visas, asylum, battered spouse waivers, and VAWA self-petitions. Her Justice helps low-income women in New York City who are trying to stabilize their immigration status and who have experienced domestic abuse or other forms of gender-based violence. Volunteers for Her Justice have received training in addressing the intricate relationship between immigration law and domestic abuse. Any immigration status will not prevent you from creating a family preparedness plan with the aid of this material.