Psychological and medical evaluations play a crucial role in immigration cases providing critical evidence to influence legal decisions related to asylum refugee status and other forms of relief. These evaluations assess an individual s physical and mental health often documenting the impact of trauma persecution or life-threatening conditions in their country of origin. The practice balances clinical expertise cultural sensitivity and legal understanding to produce comprehensive and credible reports. These assessments draw from psychological and medical frameworks to address trauma stress and resilience. In practice evaluators must navigate complex ethical considerations including informed consent confidentiality and the potential for re-traumatization. As immigration policies remain scrutinized the role of mental health and medical professionals in this domain is more important and ethically demanding than ever. Psychological Evaluations in Immigration Cases: Theory Practice and Ethical Considerations examines the cultural psychological medical and legal aspects inherent in immigration cases. It provides theoretical and practical insights into the crucial aspects of psychological and medical evaluations in immigration cases. This book covers topics such as violent crime language barriers trauma and stress and is a useful resource for psychologists medical professionals government officials policymakers academicians researchers and scientists.