Children and Migration

Millions of children around the world are affected by migration.  This includes girls and boys who migrate within and between countries (usually with their families but sometimes on their own), as well as children ‘left behind’ when their parents or caregivers migrate in search of economic opportunities.  Be it forced or voluntary, by adults or children, migration affects children’s care situations and can entail risks to their protection.

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UNHCR,

This guidance note is part of the Handbook for the Protection of Internally Displaced Persons launched by the Global Protection Cluster in Geneva in June 2010. The target audience is staff of humanitarian, human rights and development agencies working in IDP operations in the field.

Human Rights Watch,

The Canary Islands were in the spotlight of international media attention in 2006 when more than 30,000 migrants arrived in rickety boats from West Africa. Among them were 928 children who arrived without a parent or care-giver.

Better Care Network and UNICEF,

Manual to assist countries in strengthening their information system around children in formal care through data collection around 15 global indicators

Save the Children, West, Andrew,

This report is a shortened version of a desk review of children’s movements in the context of regional migration (Children’s Migration: Diversities, Exploitation, Participation and Protection in the Greater Mekong Sub-region of South-East Asia, available separately from Save the Children).

Joint Learning Initiative on Children Affected by AIDS: Learning Group on Families,

This review explores the short- and long-term implications of migration for families in the context of HIV and AIDS, focusing mainly on sub-Saharan Africa.

Daniela Reale - Save the Children UK,

This report from Save the Children examines the experiences of “children on the move,” the types of supports they need, and how protection systems can be adapted to meet those needs. 

International Reference Centre for the Rights of Children Deprived of their Family (ISS/IRC),

Review of various topics surrounding the area of adoption.

Save the Children,

The study aimed to gain insight into the migration experiences of children who cross international borders unaccompanied. 

Maruja M. B. Asis - Journal of Asian Population Studies ,

Based on data collected from a 2003 nationwide study, this article examines how left-behind children (specifically those aged 10–12 years old and adolescents) cope without their migrant parents.

International Rescue Committee,

A report outlining lessons learned in identifying durable solutions for unaccompanied and separated children in Guinea.