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JyanMara
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Posted on 01-12-10 9:44
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Can anyone provide me information on if you could apply green card yourself or not when you have a phd degree ? Any information would be greatly appreciated
Last edited: 12-Jan-10 09:51 AM
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dhoti_prasad
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Posted on 01-12-10 10:07
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JyanMara jee: (क्या डरलाग्दो नाम) There is no direct relation between Ph.D. and green card. Green card is applied by the employer who has hired you in H1 visa status (For J1, it needs to be waived and converted). Hence, applying Green Card yourself without employment will not come to picture here unless you are applying in some other way.
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Lahure Kancha
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Posted on 01-12-10 10:12
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Postdocs can take advantage of self-petition: Post doc’s/PhD’s (and some exceptional PhD students) can take advantage of two useful approaches for their Green card/Permanent residency application. As a PhD you can self-petition for your permanent residency via an EB1-A, extraordinary ability or an EB2-NIW, National interest wavier categories. - These two categories do not require a sponsorship from an employer. They also do not require a permanent job offer.
- Beneficiaries can self-petition and their application is not tied to any employer.
- Beneficiaries have a great flexibility in changing jobs within their research area.
- Beneficiaries can by-pass the PERM labor certification process saving them significant amount time.
MORE INFO and MY SOURCE : http://www.greencardforphd.com
Last edited: 12-Jan-10 10:12 AM
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pokhari
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Posted on 01-12-10 10:16
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Does anybody know what will be processing time frame for a nepali for I140, I485 in EB3 category and I824 processing for following to join? Anybody been through recently?
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JyanMara
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Posted on 01-12-10 11:16
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Thank you very much for the information. Actually this is the same site I read about self petition. I checked the USCIS website but it doesn't mention any such thing for PHD student. I am trying to get into a good school for PHD but skeptical to rely on the hearsay. Please let me know if you have more supporting sites to this issue.
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mohanB
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Posted on 01-12-10 11:47
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if you have phd from US, you can apply for EB-1 and get GC in less than a year, but please don't murder somebody.
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perrybhadra
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Posted on 01-12-10 12:07
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JyanMara: I don;t think it is a good idea to join PhD for the GC. The EB1A requirement that a phd holder can self-petition has some stringnent requirements. It states that you should have published 3 or more papers in Journal and that you should have been involved in researches they have specified. If I were you I would do some more research in this subject matter b4 joining PhD
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cincinnati_boy
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Posted on 01-12-10 12:10
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Filing self petition is different from purpose. What it means is you don't need a PhD to file petition by yourself. Most of the comapnies have lawyers to do that but since most of the jobs related to PhD is academic and very legit, it's easy to file petition and handle cases. So, yes it is easy and petition can be filed but there needs to be purpose, i.e. employment. Still US immigration doesn't have path to LPR like canada or Australia, I am assuming you are wondering as such. Goodluck with PhD. General process time is 6-8 months, remember PhD candid don't have to file Labor so you save chunk of your petition time. However, I-140 usually takes 4 months and I-485 around 3 months depending on center.
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JyanMara
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Posted on 01-12-10 12:20
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I have a masters degree and my H1 got reject in 2009 so am enrolled in second masters and have kept my status intact. I am looking for options to go back home and come back safely. This blog has been very helpful and thank you to all who contributed. What recommendation do you pose for my situation? Any help is greatly appreciated. Thank you!!!
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JyanMara
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Posted on 01-12-10 12:28
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MohanB, Can a PHD student himself apply for GC while in the process of getting PHD? Or he has to wait till he gets the degree and an employer applies for him?
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MeroJageer
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Posted on 01-12-10 1:20
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I wonder how anyone can apply for green card without employment. Candidates with any level of academic degree need to go through employer. One of my friends was doing a post doc in US government research institute in J1 visa. Later he applied for J1 waiver and changed to H1B. Then his govt research institute applied for green card in EB1 category and he got it in 6 months. He did not have to go through labor.
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Riten
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Posted on 01-12-10 2:36
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Best to confer with lawyer. Not all PhDs are equal, it really depends on whether your field is of national interest. For example, if you have a Doctorate on Leisure Studies (yes, there actually is such a field), it is probably safe to say that you do not qualify. However, if you have made significant contribution in the field of ... say, AstroPhsyics... and have a dozen or more published articles in recognized peer-reviewed journals that have been referred to by articles published by others in recognized peer-reviewed journals, and have written recommendation letters from experts (preferably with PhD in AstroPhysics), you should have a competent lawyer evaluate your chances.
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*~Spring~*
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Posted on 01-12-10 3:09
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I kinda agree with Riten. Depends on your field of study. If you have PhD then you can apply for National interest Waiver EB2 catogery but this is not an easy category. You have to have certain #s of journal published and atleast 10 reference letters. This one doesn't need any employment but you gotta prove that you have enough materials to claim that GC. Goodluck!!!
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Highlander
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Posted on 01-12-10 4:20
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Do you guys have suggestions for nice Lawyers to process EB2-NIW petition? Some of you might have first hand experience in this process. Please share....
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Om shauraye namah
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Posted on 01-12-10 4:39
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You may not go to a Lawyer if you have EXTRAORDINARY PhD degree from Sudan(example)and then your such new idea got felicitated from at least 3 different countries say- Germany, Japan , and Canada etc. If you are Honored with similar position in great national Newspapers irrespective even if you dont have PhD you can file in EB1 category. If you have qualification for eg, like Salma Hayek, you dont require a PhD.
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dapu
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Posted on 01-12-10 6:45
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Here you GO: This all you need to knowEligibility and FilingAliens with extraordinary ability are those with "extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics which has been demonstrated by sustained national or international acclaim and whose achievements have been recognized in the field through extensive documentation." You must be one of "that small percentage who have risen to the very top of the field of endeavor," to be granted this classification. For example, if you receive a major internationally recognized award, such as a Nobel Prize, you will qualify for an EB-1 classification. Other awards may also qualify if you can document that the award is in the same class as a Nobel Prize. Since few workers receive this type of award, alternative evidence of EB-1 classification based on at least three of the types of evidence outlined below, is permitted. The worker may submit "other comparable evidence" if the following criteria do not apply: - Receipt of lesser nationally or internationally recognized prizes or awards for excellence;
- Membership in associations in the field which demand outstanding achievement of their members;
- Published material about the alien in professional or major trade publications or other major media;
- Evidence that the alien has judged the work of others, either individually or on a panel;
- Evidence of the alien's original scientific, scholarly, artistic, athletic, or business-related contributions of major significance to the field;
- Evidence of the alien's authorship of scholarly articles in professional or major trade publications or other major media;
- Evidence that the alien's work has been displayed at artistic exhibitions or showcases;
- Performance of a leading or critical role in distinguished organizations;
- Evidence that the alien commands a high salary or other significantly high remuneration in relation to others in the field;
- Evidence of commercial successes in the performing arts.
Outstanding professors and researchers are recognized internationally for their outstanding academic achievements in a particular field. In addition, an outstanding professor or researcher must have at least three years experience in teaching or research in that academic area, and enter the U.S. in a tenure or tenure track teaching or comparable research position at a university or other institution of higher education. If the employer is a private company rather that a university or educational institution, the department, division, or institute of the private employer must employ at least three persons full time in research activities and have achieved documented accomplishments in an academic field. Evidence that the professor or researcher is recognized as outstanding in the academic field must include documentation of at least two of the following: - Receipt of major prizes or awards for outstanding achievement;
- Membership in associations that require their members to demonstrate outstanding achievements;
- Published material in professional publications written by others about the alien's work in the academic field;
- Participation, either on a panel or individually, as a judge of the work of others in the same or allied academic field;
- Original scientific or scholarly research contributions in the field;
- Authorship of scholarly books or articles (in scholarly journals with international circulation) in the field.
Some executives and managers of foreign companies who are transferred to the U.S. may qualify. A multinational manager or executive is eligible for priority worker status if he or she has been employed outside the U.S. in the three years preceding the petition for at least one year by a firm or corporation and seeks to enter the U.S to continue service to that firm or organization. The employment must have been outside the United States in a managerial or executive capacityand with the same employer, an affiliate, or a subsidiary of the employer. The petitioner must be a U.S. employer, doing business for at least one year, that is an affiliate, a subsidiary, or the same employer as the firm, corporation or other legal entity that employed the foreign national abroad. Definitions of terms relevant to this EB-1 category are found in 8 CFR § 204.5. Application ProceduresA USCIS Form I-140 (Petition for Alien Worker) is required. All I-140 petitions must be filed at the USCIS Regional Service Center that has jurisdiction over the place where the individual will work. The petition packet must include the required documentary evidence and should follow the specific filing guidelines of the Service Center. No labor certification is needed for EB-1 petitions. While the EB-1 worker of extraordinary ability may petition for himself or herself, the employer must file the petition for an outstanding professor or researcher and a multinational executive or manager. Forms are available by calling 1-800-870-3676, or by submitting a request through our forms by mail system. For further information on filing fees, please see USCIS filing fees, fee waiver request procedures, and the USCIS fee waiver policy memo. Please click here for more information on USCIS offices.
Last edited: 12-Jan-10 06:45 PM
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