'Not Refugee Children, Not Migrant Children, Children First': Lack of a systematic and integrated approach
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D'Costa, Bina
Toczydlowska, Emilia
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Abstract
By now, the staggering figures involved in child
migration globally are familiar to us all. However it is
important to remind ourselves that 50 million children
worldwide have been uprooted – including 28 million
children forced to move due to conflict and violence.1
One in every 200 refugees is a child. In Europe, one
in every four asylum applications is made by a minor.
Yet, while child migration is recognized as one of the
most pressing humanitarian challenges of our time,
our analysis reveals a significant lack of understanding
about children’s mobility. A strong focus is placed
upon drafting new regulations and frameworks
instead of addressing some of the underlying – and,
to some extent, invisible – problems entrenched in the
region- and country-specific policies and practices that
contribute to implementation gaps in migration systems.
Within migration pathways, there is a need to explicitly
recognize the rights of children – not as migrants or as
refugees, but as children first.
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Innocenti Research Brief
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Open Access via publisher website
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Restricted until
2037-12-31