Success Story: NAILG Secures NIW Approval for a Food Science Researcher by Framing Dairy Innovation as a Scalable U.S. Manufacturing Priority
Client’s Testimonial:
“Thank you for your excellent support throughout my I-140 process. Your professionalism, clear guidance, prompt responses, careful attention to the details, and well-structured system made the process clear and less stressful. Thank you again for all your help!”
On January 29th, 2026, we received another EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver) approval for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Field of Food Science (Approval Notice).
General Field: Food Science
Position at the Time of Case Filing: Postdoctoral Research Associate
Country of Origin: Turkey
State of Residence at the Time of Filing: Minnesota
Approval Notice Date: January 29th, 2026
Processing Time: 2 months, 10 days (Premium Processing Upgrade Requested)
Case Summary:
Some NIW cases are won by showing that the work is not only scientifically rigorous, but also directly tied to U.S. industry needs in a way an adjudicator can evaluate quickly. For this case, North America Immigration Law Group (Chen Immigration Law Associates) focused on explaining, in plain terms, why the client’s dairy-focused research has national importance and why the client is well-positioned to keep delivering practical, scalable solutions in the United States.
The client is an expert in food science with a Ph.D. in Food Engineering. The proposed endeavor is to continue investigating structure-function relationships in dairy foods by applying state-of-the-art analytical techniques, developing innovative predictive models, and translating newly generated knowledge into industry-focused solutions that improve product stability and quality, enhance shelf life and processing efficiency, and support sustainable growth in the U.S. dairy industry. Strategically, we framed this as work that strengthens reliability and efficiency in dairy manufacturing, where stability and shelf life are tightly connected to waste reduction, product consistency, and supply-chain resilience.
To align this technical record with NIW requirements, we organized the evidence around three credibility anchors:
- A specialized technical foundation: advanced training directly tied to dairy processing, ingredient characterization, and predictive modeling, supporting that the client has the expertise to execute the endeavor at a high level.
- A track record of peer-validated output: 32 peer-reviewed journal articles (13 first-authored), 16 conference abstracts (6 first-authored), and 1 first-authored book chapter. We presented this record as sustained productivity in a consistent technical direction, rather than a broad list of unrelated projects.
- Independent reliance and trust signals: 813 citations and at least 39 completed peer reviews. These indicators were not treated as self-explanatory. We framed citations as evidence that other researchers and practitioners are using the client’s methods and findings as inputs for their own work, and we framed peer-review invitations as a separate signal of professional trust because journals typically select reviewers who are regarded as technically reliable. The record also included evidence of major research support tied to the National Dairy Council, which we positioned as corroborating that the research direction aligns with industry-relevant priorities.

