About Akash Patel

Born in London, Akash Patel is the son of Indian immigrants. Akash's family moved from India to England and then to the United States in the early 1990s in search of a better life. Akash watched his family thrive even with modest means, so he learned early on how to take full advantage of any opportunity to better himself and others.

Akash was less than two years old when he arrived in America, but was not afforded citizenship until the age of 23. Protracted wait times meant that Akash's family lived as undocumented immigrants for 16 of those years until they obtained their green cards in 2009. But Akash's inspiration has always been the struggle and triumph of his sister, Nisha, who aged out of her family petition and was forced to wait until 2021 to receive her green card – a full 12 years longer than the rest of her family. Yet, Nisha never let these obstacles stop her. Nisha still went on to pursue a PhD in Microbiology at the University of Oklahoma (OU) and is now a successful microbiologist in Cambridge, MA due in large part to President Obama's Executive Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.

As a result, Akash founded the non-profit Aspiring Americans to serve other undocumented students in Oklahoma just like his sister, which has raised nearly $350,000 and has trained thousands of educators on serving this vulnerable population. At that same time, Akash also enjoyed working with Oklahoma City Public Schools by serving on the Lau Planning Committee as well as the Superintendent's Diversity Council to ensure that all diverse student groups have equitable educational outcomes. Building on these experiences, Akash then attended law school at the University of Michigan where he had the opportunity to work at the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, Educational Opportunities Section in D.C., advocate for youth through the Juvenile Justice Clinic, extern at the Michigan Immigrants Rights Center, and lead multiple delegations of volunteers to the country's largest immigrant family detention center in Dilley, Texas to help women and children apply for asylum.

After volunteering in Dilley during the height of the family separation crisis and in Tijuana during the Trump Administration's Remain in Mexico policy, Akash joined Hogan Lovells and oversaw all the individual, named plaintiffs in both of the major asylum ban cases against the Trump Administration. Akash also maintained his own robust docket of asylum, Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS), and habeas cases in district court, family court, immigration court, the Board of Immigration Appeals, and multiple circuit courts. 

Now, Akash has joined the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Refugee Resettlement to assist with critical regulatory, oversight, and policy efforts to serve unaccompanied children seeking asylum in the United States.

Akash Patel Speaks on HHS Human Trafficking Prevention Panel – August 2023

Akash Patel's TEDxOU Talk on The Plight and Persistence of Undocumented Students – February 2014

Education

  • BA in Political Science, University of Oklahoma
  • JD in Law, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

Professional Fields

Work History

  • Legislative Intern, Oklahoma State Senate
  • Legal Intern, Oklahoma Supreme Court
  • Education Policy Intern, Center for American Progress
  • Founder, Executive Director, Aspiring Americans
  • Campaign Manager, Michael-Brooks Jimenez for State Senate
  • Legal Intern, Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Educational Opportunities Section
  • Student Attorney, Juvenile Justice Clinic
  • Student Attorney, Michigan Immigrant Rights Center
  • Attorney, Hogan Lovells US LLP
  • Senior Program Advisor; Regulatory Counsel, United States Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Refugee Resettlement

Milestones and Recognition

  • University of Oklahoma Carl Albert Award | Top award for graduating senior in College of Arts of Sciences 2014
  • NAFSA Award for Special Service to International Education 2015
  • Human Rights Award, Oklahoma Universal Human Rights Alliance 2014
  • Ambassador of Hope Award, Ruth Joyce Colbert Barnes Foundation 2015
  • Best Pro Bono Project, University of Michigan Law School 2018 & 2019
  • Pro Bono Service Award, Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) 2020
  • Rising Star Award, National Immigrant Justice Center 2021
  • Hubert H. Humphrey Award for Service to America, HHS 2022
  • SPECIAL ACT AWARD FOR LEADERSHIP ON SIGNIFICANT INCIDENT REPORT REDESIGN PROJECT, HHS ADMINISTRATION FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES 2023
  • SPECIAL ACT AWARD FOR LEADERSHIP ON IMMIGRATION LEGAL SERVICES FOR AFGHAN ARRIVALS PROJECT, HHS ADMINISTRATION FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES 2023
  • NATIONAL 30 UNDER 30 FOR LEADERSHIP IN PHILANTHROPY, PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY 2016

Akash's Links

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