Category: NOID

Defending Scholarly Authorship in RFE Responses

Posted by: Park Evaluations

By Amy Fredrickson With the increase in RFE and NOID responses to extraordinary ability petitions, Park and our clients are more frequently encountering pushback to the “authorship of scholarly articles” criterion, such as: The evidence submitted does not qualify as “scholarly”; Using comparable evidence for this criterion is inappropriate in the context of the field. Park’s experts are helping clients navigate responses to these arguments from USCIS. Our professors leverage their understanding of the unique dynamics within their fields to explain why the evidence submitted can be categorized as scholarly and/or why it is appropriate to use comparable evidence for this criterion. For example, in a recent case written by one of Park’s business experts, we helped a client respond to an RFE argument that stated using comparable evidence for the authorship criterion was not appropriate in the context of Marketing and Business Analytics. To respond, our expert outlined the unique attributes of business and marketing disciplines and established that presenting at industry events is an acceptable and necessary application of comparable evidence for scholarly authorship. In another recent ...

Continue Reading   

Final Merits Challenges and NOIDs: How Park’s Expert Letters Can Help

Posted by: Park Evaluations

By Amy Fredrickson In this challenging immigration climate, firms are increasingly navigating Notice of Intent to Deny (NOID) decisions from USCIS in response to extraordinary ability and outstanding researcher visa petitions. Many of these decisions acknowledge satisfaction of the basic evidentiary criteria but challenge cases based on the second phase of the adjudication process: the final merits review. Park’s experts help firms respond to these final merits challenges through various techniques. For instance, we offer in-depth expert letters that contextualize why evidence is of sufficient quality to distinguish a beneficiary from those who may only meet the literal definition of the extraordinary ability criteria. In a recent case, our expert used his background in academia to explain a candidate’s impressive publication record. By ...

Continue Reading   

.