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MinAs: unaccompanied minors' rights

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  • MinAs: unaccompanied minors' rights

MinAs: unaccompanied minors' rights

This page now redirects to Pure

https://research.brighton.ac.uk/en/projects/in-whose-best-interests-exploring-unaccompanied-minors-rights-thr

established October 2023

 

CROME Research Fellow Jo Wilding and Professor Marie-Bénédicte Dembour investigated the situation of unaccompanied children seeking asylum and the extent to which the UK Government implements their rights under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

The full title of the MinAs project was: In whose best interests? Exploring unaccompanied minors’ rights through the lens of migration and asylum processes. Research was funded by PPUAM (Pilot Project – Analysis of reception, protection and integration for unaccompanied minors in the EU) of the European Union. The project involved collaboration between researchers from four European countries (Slovenia, Austria, France and United Kingdom).

Whose best interests report cover

Read the full UK national report of Whose best interests? Exploring unaccompanied minors’ rights through the lens of migration and asylum processes.

Project timeframe

This research commenced in June 2014 and ended in December 2015.

Project objectives

The main project aim was to identify and recommend better procedures and protection measures for unaccompanied minors (UAM). The project examined reception, protection, asylum and return procedures and focused on:

  • the concept of best interests of the child (BIC)
  • the formal processes of best interests determination (BID).

The project looked at both concepts in the actual legal framework for UAM reception, protection, asylum and return procedures in the four EU countries. Many European countries have not yet introduced best interests determination procedures into their national legislation for UAM. In these cases, a lack of appropriate safeguards for UAM is most likely to arise, leaving the possibility of potentially problematic flexible interpretation of the child’s best interests, which may lead to nationalist, xenophobic and discriminatory reasoning and practice.

In order to contribute to fulfilling the national obligations set out by international law, as well as following the aims of the European Commission, the project documented the gaps in the protection of the best interests of the child and offered recommendations.

[Unaccompanied migrant children] are entitled to protection under domestic legislation and international agreements, the most universally accepted of which is the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC).

Human Rights of Unaccompanied Migrant Children and Young People in the UK First Report of Session 2013–14, Joint Committee on Human Rights

Project findings and impact

We present our key findings relating to the asylum process and care system and our overall recommendations here and in the executive summary of our full report.

Eleven unaccompanied children or former unaccompanied children and seventeen experts were interviewed in the context of this research.

Asylum process

  • Both sets of interviewees regard the asylum process as hostile, interrogatory and lacking in adequate procedural safeguards for the child. The asylum process is contrary to the children's best interests.
  • In contrast to the provisions for children in criminal justice processes, the appropriate adult safeguard is ineffective in the asylum process and does not prevent oppressive, confusing or repetitive questioning by interviewers.
  • The asylum process fails to gather information relevant to determining children’s best interests.
  • Despite it being the mechanism best suited to safeguarding many children's best interests, the category of humanitarian protection is virtually never considered for unaccompanied children, let alone granted. This is to the detriment of children, especially those aged or nearing 17 and a half years old.
  • Where judges complied with guidance for children’s cases, appeal hearings were a benign or positive experience for young people, but where judges failed to implement guidance, children were denied the right to effective participation in the proceedings.
  • There is no alternative to the asylum process for unaccompanied children seeking some form of protection in the UK.
  • Significant problems remain with age assessment, including assessments which do not appear to comply with the legal requirements and a lack of clarity about the number of assessments and disputes arising.

Care system

  • Freedom of information requests showed that seven out of 150 local authorities in England look after 43 per cent of all unaccompanied asylum seeking children in the country.
  • The high concentration of unaccompanied children appears detrimental when it leads to children:
    • being allocated to social workers with higher caseloads and thus less time for any one child in their charge
    • having limited access to good quality legal representation
    • having lower chances of entering foster care
    • having delayed access to or long journeys for receiving education
    • being less likely to receive money to access places of worship and leisure activities vital for their physical and mental wellbeing.
  • With no system of guardianship in England for unaccompanied children seeking asylum, the formal support system existing for these children is fragmented and certain roles remain unfulfilled in practice.
  • None of the young people interviewed had been allocated an Independent Visitor, despite this being a statutory entitlement.
  • In some cases, children develop a relationship with an adult who takes a significant role in their life, with tremendously positive impact. This happens on an ad hoc rather than a systematic basis, highlighting the need for a guardianship system.
  • Legal aid cuts and the Legal Aid Agency’s contracting practices have created some serious obstacles  to accessing good quality legal representation.

Recommendations

The outcomes of this research suggest a need for the UK government to:

  • develop a child-friendly method of sharing responsibility for unaccompanied children around the UK so that children are not disadvantaged by being concentrated in a few areas (subject to the caveat that this process must respect the children’s opinions and best interests and must not resemble the adult dispersal system);
  • apply the guidance from the Police and Evidence Act for appropriate adults in criminal justice cases to those in asylum cases;
  • amend the asylum process to respect the best interests of children throughout, including the method of information gathering and the type of information gathered;
  • make better and wider use of humanitarian protection in children’s cases as a means of implementing durable solutions which are genuinely in the individual child’s best interests;
  • reinstate legal aid for all children’s cases, whether asylum or not, and amend the legal aid contract to permit/better incentivise good quality representation;
  • amend the immigration rules to allow for family reunion for children recognised as refugees;
  • pilot a system of guardianship for all unaccompanied children.

It is envisaged that these research findings will improve understanding about the best interests of children and provide a solid basis for proper implementation of the principle in practice.

Please enable targeting cookies in order to view this video content on our website, or you can .

Watch Research Fellow Jo Wilding talk about unaccompanied minors' rights.

Whose best interest report cover

Read the UK national report (executive summary) of Whose best interests? Exploring unaccompanied minors’ rights through the lens of migration and asylum processes.

Someone else's problem poster by Jo Wilding

Further dissemination and impact

Read Jo Wilding's articles in The Conversation entitled:

Young Eritreans are victims of poor decision making by British asylum officials.

Immigrants told to leave UK face huge hike in fees to appeal decisions.

Revealed: asylum seeker children face welfare lottery on arrival in Britain

Explainer: how does the UK decide who gets asylum?

The false economy of giving sloppy legal advice to asylum seekers

We hosted the Home and Away: migrant and refugee resettlement in the UK event, as part of the ESRC Festival of Social Science on Friday 13 November from 2-6pm in the 91¶¶Òõ Grand Parade Boardroom. Speakers included Dr Mike Collyer and Dr Linda Tip (University of Sussex), Jo Wilding and Professor Marie-Bénédicte Dembour (91¶¶Òõ), consultants Nick Scott Flynn and Richard Williams, teacher of English as an Additional Language Irene Mezheritsky-Tsherit and Jackie Chase from Radio Free 91¶¶Òõ.

In March 2016, the MinAs team responded to a call for evidence from the House of Lords for an inquiry into the situation of unaccompanied children in the EU carried out by the EU Home Affairs Sub-Committee. Two responses were submitted:

  • one response related to the situation in the UK
  • the second response related to the situation in the four countries covered in the MinAs project - Austria, France, Slovenia and the United Kingdom.

In the report published by the House of Lords European Union Committee in July 2016, evidence submitted by our researchers was cited frequently throughout. Our firm hope is that our research will have a beneficial impact on the reception and treatment of unaccompanied minors.

Children in crisis report cover

Read the Children in crisis: unaccompanied migrant children in the EU report..

Research team

Professor Marie-Bénédicte Dembour

Joanna Wilding

Output

Reports

House of Lords European Union Committee - Children in crisis: unaccompanied migrant children in the EU. (July 2016)

UK national report (executive summary) - In whose best interests? Exploring unaccompanied minors’ rights through the lens of migration and asylum processes. (September 2015)

UK national report (full) - In whose best interests? Exploring unaccompanied minors’ rights through the lens of migration and asylum processes. (September 2015)

Articles

Wilding, J (2017) Young Eritreans are victims of poor decision making by British asylum officials. The Conversation, 25 January.

Wilding, J (2016) Immigrants told to leave UK face huge hike in fees to appeal decisions. The Conversation, 28 September.

Wilding, J (2016) Explainer: how does the UK decide who gets asylum? The Conversation, 26 January.

Wilding, J (2015) The false economy of giving sloppy legal advice to asylum seekers. The Conversation, 7 December.

Wilding, J (2015) Revealed: asylum seeker children face welfare lottery on arrival in Britain. The Conversation. 24 September.

Written submissions

Written responses to a call for evidence from the House of Lords for an inquiry into the situation of unaccompanied children in the EU carried out by the EU Home Affairs Sub-Committee relating to the situation for unaccompanied children in the EU in relation to:

  • the UK
  • the UK, Austria, France and Slovenia.

Events

Home and Away: migrant and refugee resettlement in the UK event, as part of the ESRC Festival of Social Science on Friday 13 November from 2-6pm in the 91¶¶Òõ Grand Parade Boardroom.

Children And Youth On The Move: Towards A More Precise Definition Of Their Best Interests (planned for 19 & 20 November 2015) in Portoroz, Slovenia.

Partners

University of Primorska, Science and Research Centre

Slovene Philanthropy

National Center for Scientific Research

University of Vienna

The Social Protection Institute of the Republic of Slovenia

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