Provisional Waivers: A Practitioner's Guide, 4th ed., written and edited by Charles Wheeler and the staff of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc. (CLINIC), provides updated, step-by-step guidance on dealing with the unlawful presence ground of inadmissibility, commonly understood to be the three- and ten-year bars.
Provisional Waivers covers everything from working with the client to documenting the case to RFEs and denials. If you represent a noncitizen caught in the unlawful presence trap, Provisional Waivers: A Practitioner's Guide can help you help them.
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Product Details | |||||||
Content Preview | Preface Summary Table of Contents Detailed Table of Contents Acknowledgments |
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Release Date | June 17, 2025 | ||||||
Format |
This product is only available in electronic format; print copies are not available. |
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Digital Library | Digital goods (MP3, PDF, ZIP, etc.) are available for download for two years after purchase. | ||||||
Refund Policy | All downloadable/digital goods purchases are final. They are not eligible for return or refund. |
Charles Wheeler
Charles Wheeler is a senior attorney with Catholic Legal Immigration Network (CLINIC) in Berkeley, CA. CLINIC provides training, technical support, legislative analysis, and legal reference materials for diocesan immigration programs and other nonprofit agencies throughout the United States. It also advocates on behalf of low-income immigrants at the local level and at the national level through administrative advocacy.
Prior to joining CLINIC, Mr. Wheeler directed the National Immigration Law Center in Los Angeles (1985–96), and the Farmworker Program of Colorado Rural Legal Services in Denver (1979–84). He has been specializing in immigration law and immigrants’ rights issues for more than 40 years. He is considered an expert in several aspects of immigration law.
He was the 2002 recipient of the Daniel Levy Memorial Award for Outstanding Achievement in Immigration Law, awarded by Matthew Bender LexisNexis. He was a 1989 recipient of the Carol King Award for Achievement in Litigation, awarded by the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia and the University of Maryland School of Law.