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           A   Congressional                                               ______
           *aResearch Service
 ~~~ i~nforming the legisIative debate since 1914___________________




 Asylum Processing at the Border: Legal Basics



 March   19, 2021
 Recent statistics and reports from the southern border show a sharp increase in the arrival of non-U.S.
 nationals (called aliens under governing law) who lack visas or other valid entry documents. (This
 Sidebar generally refers to such aliens encountered at the cusp of entry into the United States as
 undocumented migrants to distinguish them from those encountered within the interior of the country.)
 The trend includes a notable uptick in the arrival of unaccompanied alien children (UACs). Department of
 Homeland Security (DHS) officials have opined that the current surge in undocumented migration could
 exceed the spike that occurred in 2019. As a result, questions have emerged about how the Biden
 Administration intends to address the surge and, in particular, how it plans to process the migrants' claims
 for humanitarian protection from persecution or torture.
 The humanitarian protections available to undocumented migrants at the border under U.S. immigration
 law include asylum (a discretionary protection from identity-based persecution abroad), withholding of
 removal (a mandatory protection from such persecution), and withholding or deferral of removal under
the Convention Against Torture (a mandatory protection from government-sponsored torture abroad).
Asylum  is the most robust of these protections and the only one that offers a dedicated pathway to lawful
permanent residence and citizenship. It also requires the lowest standard of proof but, unlike the other
two, may be denied for discretionary reasons even to aliens who qualify for it. Despite their differences,
however, all of these forms of humanitarian protection have similar implications for the regulation of
undocumented  migration to the border, as explained further below. (For brevity and per common usage,
this Sidebar refers to the legal mechanisms for evaluating claims for any of these humanitarian
protections as asylum processing or asylum procedure.)
For now, the Biden Administration has mostly retained a pandemic-related policy implemented by the
Trump Administration that, on public health grounds, permits DHS to expel undocumented migrants at
the border without any asylum processing. The Administration is currently reassessing that policy and has
exempted UACs   from it. How the Administration would approach asylum processing at the border
without the pandemic-related policy remains unclear.







                                                                  Congressional Research Service
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