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'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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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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2037-12-31
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