These are not services that we provide. If you need support, please contact one of the organizations in the section below to be connected with an appropriate support network.

Resources for Individuals Seeking Support

  • National Immigration Women Advocacy Project
    • NIWAP is a national expert on the legal rights and services available to immigrant victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, child and elder abuse, stalking, human trafficking, and other forms of violence.
  • National Immigration Law Center
    • Established in 1979, the National Immigration Law Center (NILC) is one of the leading advocacy organizations in the U.S. dedicated to advancing and defending the rights and opportunities of low-income immigrants and their loved ones.
  • Immigration Legal Resource Center
    • A national nonprofit resource center that provides immigration legal trainings, technical assistance, and educational materials, and engages in advocacy and immigrant civic engagement to advance immigrant rights.
  • Immigration Advocates Network
  • Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center
    • Provide high-quality legal services to low-income immigrants and advocate for human rights.
  • Oasis Legal Services
    • Provides quality, holistic and trauma-informed legal and social services to low-income LGBTQ+ community members.
  • Sus Derechos
    • Provides immigrant communities in the tri-county region of Monterey, San Benito, and Santa Cruz with reliable and up-to-date information about their rights in this country.

Take Action to Support Immigration Rights and Justice

  • Hispanics in Philanthropy’s Resource Toolkit
    • Hispanics in Philanthropy raise awareness about issues that impact Latine communities within the philanthropy sector. They have created a resource guide to help organizations act strategically to protect communities and advance meaningful change.
  • Freedom for Immigrants
    • FFI is an abolitionist nonprofit organization working to end immigration incarceration by organizing with and following the leadership of currently and formerly incarcerated immigrants.
  • Lideres Campesinas
    • The mission of Líderes Campesinas is to strengthen the leadership of farmworker women and youth so that they can be agents of economic, social, and political change and ensure their hhts.
  • Santa Cruz County Immigration Project
    • SCCIP’s mission is to promote the well-being of the immigrant community in Santa Cruz County and the Pájaro Valley. They do this by helping immigrants acquire legal status, reuniting immigrant families, and making U.S. citizenship more accessible to eligible immigrants. SCCIP also provides competent and professional legal services, advocacy, and community education and information.
  • The Coalition of Humane Immigrant Rights
    • Founded in 1986 to advance the human and civil rights of immigrants and refugees, CHIRLA became a place for organizations and people who support human rights to work together for policies that advance justice and full inclusion for all immigrants.
  • United We Dream
    • United We Dream is the largest immigrant youth-led network in the country. They create welcoming spaces for young people – regardless of immigration status – to support, engage, and empower them to make their voices heard
  • American Immigration Council
    • The Council strives to strengthen the United States by shaping immigration policies and practices through innovative programs, cutting-edge research, and strategic legal and advocacy efforts grounded in evidence, compassion, justice, and fairness.
  • National Immigrant Justice Center
  • Immigration Equality
    • Immigration Equality is the national leader in the LGBTQ and HIV immigration rights field. They work on both the personal and systemic levels to protect and uplift LGBTQ and HIV-positive immigrants and families.