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E-raamat: Children's Rights and Refugee Law: Conceptualising Children within the Refugee Convention

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Law and Migration
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Aug-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351683579
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Law and Migration
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Aug-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351683579

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Children make up half of the world’s refugees and over 40 per cent of the world’s asylum seekers. Yet, children are largely invisible in historical and contemporary refugee law. Furthermore, there has been very limited interaction between the burgeoning children’s rights framework, in particular the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), and the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees (Refugee Convention). This book explores the possibility of a children’s rights approach to the interpretation of the Refugee Convention and within that what such an approach might look like.

In order to construct a children’s rights approach, the conceptualisations of children outside the legal discipline, within international children’s rights law and then within refugee law and refugee discourse are analysed. The approach taken is socio-legal and comparative in nature and the suitability of the Refugee Convention as a framework for the interpretation of child claims is examined. The book analyses to what extent the Refugee Convention is capable of dealing with claims from children based on the modern conceptualisation of children which is underscored by two competing ideologies - the child as a vulnerable object in law to be protected and the child as subject with rights and the capacity to exercise their agency. The influence each regime has had on the other is also analysed. The work discusses how a children’s rights approach might improve outcomes for child applicants.

The book makes an original contribution to child refugee discourse and as such will be an invaluable resource for academics, researchers and policy-makers working in the areas of migration and asylum law, children’s rights, and international human rights law.

Arvustused

"In this meticulously researched and lucidly presented book, Samantha Arnold investigates the implications of the enduring legal disjunction between children's rights and refugee protection norms. At a time when the number of distress child migrants in need of international protection is at an all time high, understanding how children fit into refugee law is a key legal question and an urgent practical necessity. Both legal scholars and child rights advocates stand to gain considerably from this timely study."

Jacqueline Bhabha

Professor of the Practice of Health and Human Rights

Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Acknowledgements xi
1 Introduction
1(13)
Introduction
1(1)
A dichotomy: children's rights and refugee law
2(1)
A children's rights approach
3(1)
Building upon the `human rights approach'
4(1)
Invisibility in refugee law
5(1)
Locating children's rights in refugee law: Article 6 and the `Three Ps Approach'
6(3)
Methodology of analysis
9(5)
2 Children, childhood and refugee law
14(25)
Abstract
14(1)
Introduction
14(2)
Indicators of childhood and being a child and refugee law
16(2)
A paradigm shift: the emergence of childhood
18(4)
The modern children's rights movement
22(1)
The beginning of the Children's Rights Movement
23(2)
Global childhood
25(2)
Conflicts within the paradigm shift: an externalisation of rights, romanticism and the role of the family
27(2)
A conceptualisation of childhood
29(1)
Limitation to the modern conceptualisation of children's rights
30(1)
Conclusions
31(8)
3 International Children's Rights Law
39(32)
Abstract
39(1)
Introduction
39(1)
Origins of children's rights in international law
40(2)
Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989 and life, survival and development
42(2)
Provision rights
44(4)
Health
44(1)
Standard of living
45(1)
Education
46(2)
Non-discrimination
48(1)
Protection rights
48(6)
Labour exploitation
49(2)
Other forms of economic exploitation
51(1)
Involvement in other illicit trades
51(1)
Military conscription
51(1)
Child marriage
52(1)
Other non-economic forms of harm
53(1)
Participation rights
54(4)
Agency in the Convention on the Rights of the Child
54(2)
Determining agency
56(1)
Right to be heard
57(1)
The role of the family in the Convention on the Rights of the Child and provision, protection and participation rights
58(2)
Children's rights and refugee law - an indirect link?
60(2)
Conclusions
62(9)
4 Children in the development of refugee law
71(19)
Abstract
71(1)
Introduction
71(1)
Children and the beginnings of international human rights law (pre-1951)
72(2)
Beginnings of refugee law
74(4)
The historical trajectory of children in the refugee paradigm
78(2)
Modern refugee law under the United Nations
80(3)
Conclusions
83(7)
5 A children's rights approach to refugee law?
90(46)
Abstract
90(1)
Introduction
90(2)
Part I
92(1)
Context setting
92(2)
Children within the Refugee Convention and the need for a cross-treaty interpretive approach: some assumptions
94(1)
Bridging the gap: treaty interpretation
95(1)
The challenge of implementing international law
96(2)
International law as national guidance
98(1)
The object and purpose of the Refugee Convention
99(1)
The object and purpose of the Convention on the Rights of the Child
100(3)
Conclusion on objects and purposes
103(1)
A children's rights approach - justification through UN Guidance
103(7)
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
104(3)
Committee on the Rights of the Child
107(3)
Challenges in the interpretation of the Refugee Convention in respect of children's rights
110(1)
Part II
111(1)
A brief introduction to persecution
111(12)
Persecution and children
112(3)
Actors of persecution and protection and the role of the family
115(1)
Children who are not eligible for protection: exclusion
116(1)
Convention grounds
117(6)
Conclusions
123(13)
6 Constructing a children's rights approach: the application of children's rights in refugee law
136(55)
Abstract
136(1)
Introduction
136(1)
Challenges to consistency in the interpretation of child refugee claims
137(1)
Part I
138(1)
Provision rights and refugee protection
138(14)
Family
139(7)
Education
146(4)
Conclusion on provision rights
150(2)
Part II
152(1)
Protection rights and refugee protection
152(11)
Exploitation
153(1)
Labour and trafficking
153(3)
Forced military recruitment and protection of children during conflict
156(1)
Involvement in illicit activities -gangs
157(2)
Other forms of harm: indiscriminate violence and torture
159(2)
Family as persecutor and protector - unattached children
161(2)
Conclusion on protection rights
163(1)
Part III
163(1)
Participation rights and refugee protection
163(10)
Imputed beliefs
165(1)
Religion
166(3)
Political opinion
169(3)
Conclusions: participation rights
172(1)
Conclusions
173(18)
A children's rights approach
176(15)
7 Conclusions
191(11)
Abstract
191(1)
Introduction
191(1)
Dichotomies
191(1)
A children's rights framework
192(1)
Invisibility in refugee law
193(1)
A bourgeoning children's rights approach to the interpretation of the Refugee Convention
193(1)
Limited case law
194(1)
A children's rights barometer for persecution: present-day case law
195(1)
A particular convention ground
196(1)
The findings
197(1)
The questions
198(1)
Moving forward
199(1)
Conclusions
200(2)
Index 202
Samantha Arnold is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow within the Irish National Contact Point of the European Migration Network based in the Economic and Social Research Institute and an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the School of Law at Trinity College Dublin. Samantha completed her PhD in the School of Law, Trinity College Dublin. Her research interests include refugee and immigration law and policy and childrens rights. She has published on these and related areas.