Background
UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, seeks several post-graduate Legal Fellows to work full-time in the Protection and Solutions Unit (PSU) at UNHCR’s Multi-Country Office in Washington, D.C. The fellowship has a duration of one year, starting in September 2026. UNHCR will work with each selected fellow to craft a portfolio of work that will provide considerable opportunity for professional development while contributing to UNHCR’s strategic objectives. Each fellow is required to obtain external funding for the full duration of their fellowship (see details under Terms of Fellowship below), and should indicate in their initial application how they intend to seek that funding.
UNHCR’s PSU team serves asylum-seekers, refugees, and stateless persons who are in the United States or the northern Caribbean or seeking to access protection in these countries and territories. PSU seeks to ensure that law and policy in these locations are aligned with international refugee law and works with stakeholders to ensure protection for forcibly displaced and stateless persons in the area that it covers.
UNHCR Legal Fellows during the 2026-2027 cycle will be based in Washington D.C. PSU Legal Fellowships
The Legal Fellows’ work will support PSU’s overall protection and solutions strategy, with a particular focus on the United States and its engagement in the region. UNHCR advises governments on how best to align their domestic asylum system with international standards. To this end, PSU provides comments on proposed legislation and regulations, submits amicus briefs on select international legal issues, and shares information on displacement trends, both globally and regionally. In addition, PSU focuses on regional protection issues, i.e. in the Americas, following U.S. diplomatic engagement with other asylum countries throughout the hemisphere, as well as related bilateral and multilateral initiatives. In the realm of statelessness, PSU conducts trainings and presentations on statelessness and nationality to a range of audiences and provides guidance on the potential stateless status of individuals who contact the office. PSU also gathers information on the protection situation of forcibly displaced and stateless persons at different stages of the asylum process, including at land borders and ports of entry, in detention, and in U.S. immigration courts, and works to develop pragmatic policy and practice options for the relevant authorities. Additionally, PSU provides information on the laws, policies, and procedures for seeking asylum and related protection in the United States to persons of concern to UNHCR.
The Legal Fellows’ areas of potential engagement include law and policy analysis at the intersection of international and domestic law, regional protection policy, monitoring of protection conditions, and individual case support.
Qualifications and Experience Required
When submitting an application, prospective fellows are encouraged to detail their experience in the immigration and refugee field as well as which skills and substantive areas of knowledge they wish to develop during their fellowship period. Fellows:
• Must be a 2026 degree candidate or recent graduate from a U.S. law school.
• Must have completed coursework in international law; refugee law; and/or human rights; additional coursework in U.S. immigration law preferable.
• Preference for experience in U.S. asylum; refugee law; and/or other topics related to refugees, asylum-seekers, and statelessness.
• Experience with legal clinics in law school, or other forms of direct service experience with asylum-seekers or statelessness would be particularly helpful.
• Fluent Spanish is essential for fellows working on US southern border and protection policy issues in the Americas, and is highly desirable for other areas of work.
• Excellent oral and written communication skills.
• Detail-oriented, with strong research and legal analysis skills.
• Self-directed, with ability to multi-task and prioritize with minimal supervision.
DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 10, 2025