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Annual Survey of Refugees 2016

Since the 1980s, the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) has conducted the Annual Survey of Refugees (ASR), which collects information on refugees during their first five years after arrival in the U.S. The ASR is the only scientifically-collected source of national data on refugees’ progress toward self-sufficiency and integration. ORR uses the ASR results alongside other information sources to fulfill its Congressionally-mandated reporting following the Refugee Act of 1980. Historically, the microdata from these surveys have generally been unavailable to researchers.

In the Spring of 2017 ORR completed its 50th Annual Survey of Refugees (ASR). The data from the ASR offer a window into respondents’ first five years in the United States and shows the progress that refugee families made towards learning English, participating in the workforce, and establishing permanent residence.

This is the first year since the ASR’s inception in the 1980s that the government has made available the underlying dataset for researchers to access and conduct their own analyses. The dataset is now available here in the Urban Institute's Data Catalog, and also through the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.

The Urban Institute has been working on this survey for the past few years, collecting and analyzing the ASR, preparing the public use dataset, and leading a survey redesign.

The new dataset offers a nationally representative survey of refugees who were resettled in the US between FY 2011 and FY 2015. This period precedes the changes to the refugee admissions system put in place by the current administration in FY 2017, when refugee resettlement numbers dropped.

It includes data on 1,500 households and more than 4,000 individuals. Reflecting the demographics of refugee inflows in that period, refugees report the following countries as the most common countries of origin, among many others: Iraq (22 percent), Burma (17 percent), Bhutan or Myanmar (12 percent), Somalia (7 percent), and Nepal (5 percent).

The dataset also includes information about

demographics and household structure;
employment, wages, and income;
educational background, education being pursued in the US, English proficiency, and participation in children’s schooling;
geographic mobility;
green card adjustment;
health conditions and health insurance;
public benefits receipt; and
housing.

These fields are compatible with DCAT, an RDF vocabulary designed to facilitate interoperability between data catalogs published on the Web.
FieldValue
Modified
2021-04-01
Release Date
2019-08-28
Frequency
Annually
Identifier
fdf17a21-a53d-4ee3-90d9-81aa2ae3bee4
Temporal Coverage
2016-01-01 00:00 to 2016-12-31 00:00
License
Contact Name
Urban Institute
Contact Email
Public Access Level
Public
These fields are specific to Urban Institute.
FieldValue
Data Dictionary Files
Data Quality or Limitations

Notes on limitations, guidance on interpretation, etc. that might determine if someone would want to download the data or not.

Citation Requirements

Urban Institute. 2016. Annual Survey of Refugees. Accessible from https://datacatalog.urban.org/dataset/annual-survey-refugees-2016. Data originally sourced from Annual Survey of Refugees 2016, developed at the Urban Institute, and made available under the ODC-BY 1.0 Attribution License.