Headman Law Group represents Humanitarian Immigration clients in Houston — supporting energy, medicine, and engineering professionals. U.S. immigration law is federal, so we guide Houston-area clients through the same proven process we use nationwide — most steps handled by video and secure document exchange, with no need to visit an office.
What Is Humanitarian Immigration?
Humanitarian immigration is the set of protections U.S. law offers to people who need safety rather than sponsorship. Instead of a job offer or a family petition, these cases turn on what a person has survived — persecution, domestic violence, a serious crime, or human trafficking — and on the protection Congress chose to extend to them.
Because the stakes are often a person's safety, these cases carry strict deadlines, demanding evidence standards, and sensitive facts. A well-prepared application tells a clear, corroborated story and connects it precisely to the legal standard. We handle that work with the care these cases require, and with attention to confidentiality at every step.
The main humanitarian pathways are asylum (for those who fear persecution in their home country), VAWA self-petitions (for survivors of abuse by a U.S. citizen or permanent-resident family member), U visas (for victims of qualifying crimes who assist law enforcement), and T visas (for survivors of human trafficking).
How We Help
We guide survivors through every stage, from first assessment to work authorization and, where available, a path to a green card.
- Screening your situation against every humanitarian option you may qualify for.
- Preparing asylum applications and declarations that meet the legal standard.
- Filing VAWA self-petitions confidentially, without the abuser's involvement.
- Securing U and T visa law-enforcement certifications and petitions.
- Requesting employment authorization as soon as the law allows.
- Mapping the route from temporary protection to lawful permanent residence.
Main Humanitarian Pathways
Each form of relief has its own eligibility test, deadline, and benefits. The summaries below show who each option fits best.
Asylum
Protection for people already in the U.S. who fear persecution in their home country on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. Generally must be filed within one year of arrival. See our dedicated Asylum page.
VAWA Self-Petition
Lets an abused spouse, child, or parent of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident petition for status on their own — confidentially and without the abuser's knowledge or cooperation. Available to women and men.
U Visa
For victims of qualifying crimes — such as domestic violence, assault, or extortion — who suffered substantial harm and are helpful to law enforcement in the investigation or prosecution. Requires a certification from a qualifying agency.
T Visa
For survivors of severe forms of human trafficking who are in the U.S. on account of trafficking and who comply with reasonable requests from law enforcement, with limited exceptions for trauma and age.
How a Humanitarian Case Generally Moves
Every case is different, but most humanitarian matters follow a similar arc from intake to relief.
Confidential Screening
We listen to what happened and assess every form of relief you may qualify for — sometimes more than one — while protecting the sensitivity of your situation.
Evidence & Declaration
We build the record: a detailed personal declaration, corroborating documents, country-conditions or medical evidence, and any required law-enforcement certification.
Filing & Work Authorization
We file the petition or application with USCIS (or in immigration court where appropriate) and pursue employment authorization at the earliest point the law permits.
Decision & Path to a Green Card
We respond to any requests for evidence or interviews and, once relief is granted, advise on the route to lawful permanent residence where the category allows it.
Common Supporting Documents
The exact set depends on the type of relief, but humanitarian cases typically draw on the following.
Identity & Status
- Passport or other identity document
- Any U.S. entry records or I-94
- Prior immigration filings or notices
- Birth and marriage certificates (for family-based relief)
Evidence of Harm
- Detailed personal declaration
- Police, medical, or court records
- Photographs, messages, or witness statements
- Country-conditions reports (for asylum)
Certifications
- U visa law-enforcement certification (Form I-918B)
- T visa law-enforcement declaration (Form I-914B), if available
- Letters from shelters, counselors, or advocates
Frequently Asked Questions
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