![](/gifs/image/tracatwork_title_top.gif) |
Putting TRAC to Work |
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/middletable/arrow.gif) |
National Catholic Reporter |
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
December 21, 2018 |
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
Legal representation for detained migrants hindered by access issues
By Maria Benevento
|
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
The government doesn't provide attorneys in immigration court because deportation is considered a civil rather than criminal penalty, even though for some migrants it can mean being returned to a country where they are at risk of persecution.
The Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University, which analyses government data, found in late 2017 that representation can make a five-fold difference in positive outcomes for asylum cases and reported that overall representation rates for detained immigrants were around 30 percent compared to around 70 percent for those never detained.
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/spacer.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/1f.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/2f.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/3f.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/1g.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/2g.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/3g.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/1h.gif) |
Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, Syracuse University
Copyright 2019
|
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/3h.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/1i.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/2i.gif) |
![](/tracatwork/pics/articles/3i.gif) |