2005
USCIS Strategic Plan: Securing America's Promise
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
"As a component of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), has developed this document as a framework incorporating pre-existing planning resources, key mission objectives, and organizational growth elements. By providing a full spectrum depiction of our organizations direction and priorities, and by aligning this document with specific USCIS priorities outlined in the Homeland Security Act, the Strategic Plan demonstrates our critical role within the DHS mission."
    Details
  • URL
  • Publisher
    U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
  • Date
    2005
  • Copyright
    Public Domain
  • Retrieved From
    U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services: uscis.gov/graphics/index.htm
  • Format
    pdf
  • Media Type
    application/pdf
  • Subjects
    Borders and immigration/Border security
    Borders and immigration/Immigration
    Infrastructure protection/Key assets
    Law and justice/Immigration law
    Terrorism and threats/Counterterrorism

Citing HSDL Resources

Documents from the HSDL collection cannot automatically be added to citation managers (e.g. Refworks, Endnotes, etc). This HSDL abstract page contains some of the pieces you may need when citing a resource, such as the author, publisher and date information. We highly recommend you always refer to the resource itself as the most accurate source of information when citing. Here are some sources that can help with formatting citations (particularly for government documents).

Worldcat: http://www.worldcat.org/

Indiana University Guide: Citing U.S. Government Publications: http://libraries.iub.edu/guide-citing-us-government-publications
Clear examples for citing specific types of government publications in a variety of formats. It does not address citing according to specific style guides.

Naval Postgraduate School: Dudley Knox Library. Citing Styles: http://libguides.nps.edu/citation
Specific examples for citing government publications according to APA and Chicago style guides. Click on the link for your preferred style then navigate to the specific type of government publication.

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