Employment Based Immigration
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EB-1 Eligibility and Filing
Aliens 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 capacity
and 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.
Source: USCIS Website
| Last accessed: February 7, 2009.
Information on this website is provided for information purposes only, and its presentation herein neither creates an attorney-client privilege nor constitutes legal advice.
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