Notes from Geneva

Dear Friends, 2011 has been a year of exciting growth and change in Asylum Access. All four of our offices are settled into great offices spaces, and our permanent leadership staff has grown by leaps and bounds. In San Francisco, we recently welcomed Erik Schnabel as our Development Director, and I took over the role […]

Quarterly Highlights

Ecuador Figures: Provided personalized legal assistance to 138 asylum seekers and refugees in Quito office, and 54 cases outside of Quito. Highlights: In October, AAE brought its first case in front of Child Protection Services and UNHCR officials participated in our volunteer training in Quito. In November, AAE won its first habeas corpus case, freeing […]

Staff Updates

Meet Asylum Access’s New Development Manager, Ally Basak Russell! Ally joined the AAHQ development team in August 2010 as its first Development Manager. She holds a B.A. in government from Dartmouth College and a J.D. with high honors from the University of Iowa College of Law. She is a member of the IL Bar and […]

Asylum Access to Host Trafficking Symposium at Georgetown Law Center

On Thursday, November 18, 2010 Asylum Access and the Georgetown Law Human Rights Institute will present “Spiraling into Desperation: The Connection Between Refugee Rights and Human Trafficking.” The event will take place from 12 to 5pm at the Georgetown Law Center, 600 New Jersey Ave. NW, Washington, DC. This groundbreaking symposium will bring together scholars, […]

Google Corporate Giving Council Awards $100,000 Through Tides Foundation

Published Autumn 2010 Asylum Access received a $100,000 grant from Google Corporate Giving Council through the Tides Foundation to create the Asylum Access Refugee Rights Toolkit, a replicable, sustainable model of refugee rights advocacy that can be implemented by activists in first countries of refuge worldwide. The toolkit will serve as a blueprint for other […]

An Update From Thailand

Our office in Thailand looks like a private townhouse, an attached brick-and-plaster building with a gated driveway. A small sign on the gate reads “Asylum Access Thailand”. “We had to put the sign up because refugees were afraid to go to a house with no sign. They were afraid it was a trap.” Arrests by […]