Committee on the rights of the child the rights of all children in the context of international migration



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UNICEF WRITTEN SUBMISSION

2012 DAY OF GENERAL DISCUSSION



COMMITTEE ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
THE RIGHTS OF ALL CHILDREN IN THE CONTEXT OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
CHILDREN IN THE CONTEXT OF MIGRATION

AND THE right to family life”
Introduction
International migration impacts on the right to family life significantly and in different ways. Restrictive migration policies have considerable implications for the way families, parents and children migrate, often with detrimental consequences on children’s right to family life.
Within the international human rights legal framework, few rights have been so widely recognised as the right to family life.1 In many of these instruments, States Parties have recognised ‘the family’ as a natural and fundamental element of society and, as such, deserving of the right to the broadest possible protection by society and State.
Human rights treaties, in particular the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), grant unequivocal importance, recognition and protection to the right to family life (see box 1, Annex III). Many CRC provisions, including the Preamble2, stress the special value of family life for children and reveal the interdependence between this right and other fundamental rights. Given the near-universal ratification of the CRC, the right to family life can arguably be accorded the status of an international norm. This right is particularly relevant to the situation of children in the context of migration.
Protecting family life presupposes a set of positive and negative obligations on the part of States Parties. Positive obligations require specific, affirmative measures directed towards guaranteeing and promoting the right to family life. Negative obligations require States Parties to abstain from acts and decisions that weaken or directly infringe on this right. In the context of migration, abstention requires that States Parties refrain from actions that violate CRC rights, including decisions that separate families.
This UNICEF submission focuses on challenges to children’s right to family life in the context of international migration. It briefly analyses the main CRC provisions and standards that directly or indirectly protect children’s right to family life, and how this right affects the situation of children and families in the context of migration. The core principles of the Convention – the best interest of the child, non-discrimination, the right to life and development, and the right to participation and being heard – are stressed throughout this analysis.
The paper goes on to analyse how children’s right to family life is respected or violated in the context of migration laws, policies and practices, in accordance with differing interpretations and applications of the CRC. Particular focus is placed on key migration law enforcement mechanisms that decisively impact family life: deportation, detention, family reunification and regularisation. The analysis demonstrates that if migration policies were to adequately consider children’s right to family life, not only would the harms resulting from detention be avoided, but the rights violations ensuing from deportation would also be averted. The same is true of policies affecting the granting of residence on the basis of the right to family life, as currently takes place in many States.3
All the issues raised in this submission should be considered in relation to its main theme: the right to family life. An exhaustive analysis of detention, deportation, and access to economic and social rights would require a far lengthier treatment than we are able to provide here.
Annex I provides recommendations to improve the fulfilment of the right to family life for all children in the context of migration. Annex II provides a set of standards and offers a non-exhaustive compilation of promising examples, including legislation, policies, practices, civil society initiatives, and jurisprudence, that protect and guarantee the right to family life for children in the context of migration.


  1. The Convention on the Rights of the Child and Children in the Context of Migration

The CRC is a key instrument for protecting children in the context of migration. States Parties must seek to ensure that Convention provisions and principles are fully reflected and given legal effect in relevant domestic legislation and policies (art. 4). These principles are: non-discrimination (art. 2), the best interests of the child (art. 3), the right to life, survival, and development (art. 6), and the right of the child to express views on all matters affecting him or her and to have these opinions taken into consideration (art. 12), and are fully articulated in the 2012 CRC DGD Background Paper.


Affirmed by its swift and wide-scale ratification,4 the CRC established a new paradigm in which States pledged to adopt a set of criteria for shaping all public policies impacting child rights. This commitment calls on States to apply the Convention transversally, across all relevant national laws and policies, as to create the conditions that permit all children within a State’s jurisdiction to effectively exercise their rights. A single law that integrally protects children, with a single agency in charge of its implementation, is thus not sufficient to fulfil Convention requirements.
According to the CRC, the normative and institutional framework establishing integral protection for children should take primacy over existing laws or policies.5 This prioritisation must also be applied to all aspects of migration policy in which a right guaranteed by the CRC is at stake, including the right to family life. In the words of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights,
[...] all authorities and institutions that come into contact with children in the context of migration are required to determine that their actions are primarily concerned with protecting the interests of the individual child. This principle should override all others; including conflicting provisions of migration policy should these arise.6
Migration laws, practices and procedures should be designed to fully and meaningfully protect children’s rights. However, too often domestic politics take precedence over States’ international obligations under the CRC.

  1. The Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Right to Family Life

The Convention demonstrates the close connection between the right to family life and all other fundamental principles underlying child rights. Further, fulfilment of the rights enshrined in the Convention is intrinsically tied to, and contingent upon, the realisation of the right to family life (see box 2, Annex III). Protecting family life also requires ensuring that the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of parents and guardians are also protected. This comprehensive approach is indispensable to ensure that, as rights-holders, children can grow and develop with dignity and without discrimination.




  1. Fundamental CRC Principles and the Right to Family Life

The right to family life in the context of migration cannot be completely understood unless it is analysed as an indivisible and interdependent part of the Convention, closely intertwined with its fundamental principles.


The best interest of the child (CRC art. 3) is a central, underlying criterion for assessing all decisions that may affect children’s rights in the context of migration. This includes general measures related to the overall legal framework, institutional organisation, budget, training, and migration procedures of States Parties, such as: conditions for regularisation of status; restrictions on social rights for migrants; and procedures for family reunification, including conditions for children’s entry in their parents’ country of destination. The best interests principle is also fundamental to evaluating individual cases, such as the expulsion of migrant families, or of parents of children with legal status or nationality in the destination country.
The principle of non-discrimination (CRC art. 2) requires States Parties to “respect and ensure the rights set forth in the […] Convention to each child within their jurisdiction without discrimination of any kind, irrespective of the child's or his or her parent's or legal guardian's race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national, ethnic or social origin, property, disability, birth or other status [emphasis added]. To assess the extent to which this principle is being respected, it is necessary to compare the effects of a State Party’s regulation of the right to family life on children affected by migration with the impact on child nationals. The CRC requires that both groups within the State’s jurisdiction be granted substantive equal treatment in the context of family life.
Similarly, the right to life, survival and development (CRC art. 6) plays an essential role in protecting the right to family life for children in the context of migration. Measures taken in the context of migration law enforcement, such as detention and deportation, have an immediate and negative impact on the living conditions of many children. Similarly, restrictions on employment rights or access to social services based on migration status severely affect the development of children of migrant families.
The right of family unity is closely linked to parents’ responsibility to guarantee the material conditions necessary for human development,7 as well as to maintain caring bonds, provide for children’s emotional and psychological development, and offer them moral and civic guidance. Article 27 of the CRC recognises the right to an adequate standard of living for every child. While the primary responsibility for securing living conditions that ensure a child's development lies with the parents or legal guardians, article 27 also calls upon States Parties to take appropriate measures to assist them in the implementation of this right, including through the provision of material assistance and support programmes, particularly with regard to nutrition, clothing and housing. The cohesiveness of the family unit is essential for fully realising the co-responsibility of the family and the State for ensuring that all children living within the State’s jurisdiction have an adequate standard of living, regardless of nationality or migration status. Furthermore, in article 18 CRC, States Parties agreed to render appropriate assistance to parents and legal guardians in performing their child-rearing responsibilities. Nevertheless, in many countries measures related to the enforcement of migration law present serious obstacles to parents’ ability to fulfil their obligations.
Finally, States Parties committed to guarantee every child’s right to participate and be heard (CRC art. 12) when making decisions and implementing procedures that affect the right to family life. Thus, child participation (applying the principle of progressive autonomy) must be guaranteed in decisions that could lead to the deportation of parents, as well as in procedures aimed at family reunification or at granting legal status to migrant families, among others.


  1. Further CRC Articles Relevant to the Right to Family Life

Like other treaties8, the CRC prohibits arbitrary interference with family life (article 16). This basic protection is a relevant starting point for analysing the extent to which migration policies and procedures interfere with family life. A migration policy or procedure that results in “arbitrary interference with family life,” is prima facie contrary to a State Party’s international legal obligations under the CRC. To determine whether a particular policy or procedure constitutes “arbitrary interference”, the guiding principles of the best interests of the child and non-discrimination can be used as interpretive tools. Article 16 is complemented by a series of supporting provisions that are also relevant in the context of migration.9


Article 9 states that children should not be separated from their parents against their will, except when such separation is deemed to be in the best interests of the child. Article 8 complements and reinforces this directive by requiring States Parties to respect a child’s right to preserve his or her identity, including family relations. As discussed further below, this pair of articles is particularly relevant in the context of migrant detention, deportation and family separation. Both articles also provide strong support for the promotion of family unity and reunification, as well as regularisation of migration status.
Another vital aspect of the right to family life in the context of migration emerges from article 10 of the CRC. This provision requires positive, humane and expeditious responses by States to any application made by a child or his or her parents for entering or leaving a State for the purpose of family reunification. Thus States Parties should seek to ensure that all family reunification procedures foreseen in migration policies are designed to recognise the right to family life.
The following section examines in greater detail some of the current human rights challenges faced by children affected by migration with regard to their right to family life.

III. Main Challenges to the Right to Family Life for Children in the Context of Migration


  1. Detention

Migration-related detention exposes children to particular vulnerabilities regarding their right to family life. Expert opinion provided to the Human Rights Council noted out that since infractions of immigration law are generally administrative in nature, they should not be considered crimes, and thus should never be subject to liberty-depriving punishments.10


In the case of children, detention should never be an option,11 since this would contradict the principle of the best interests of the child and the spirit of the entire CRC, which only permits detention as a last resort for the shortest period of time in procedures that are criminal in nature (CRC art. 37).
Nevertheless, numerous States have resorted to detaining children, with and without their parents,12 in contravention of CRC principles.13 Perhaps the most egregious misinterpretation of the CRC is the claim that placing children in detention facilities is necessary to keep the family unit intact, reflecting an erroneous and improper interpretation of the right to family life. Claiming that children should be detained to keep families together is not consistent with States Parties’ positive obligation to ensure the best interests of the child, nor with the principles and rights that the Convention seeks to protect.14 The general rules of interpretation established by article 31 of the Vienna Convention on the Rights of Treaties and the pro-persona principle included in many human rights treaties prohibit this kind of rights-restrictive interpretation, noting that a legal provision may not be interpreted in a way that curtails rights that the provision is intended to protect. Such interpretations are seen as a perversion of the law. Thus, the right to family life cannot be invoked to justify interference with other rights, such as personal liberty.
The impact of detention on family relations can be seriously detrimental, especially if while they are being held children see their parents’ roles undermined by State authorities over a long period of time.15 Similarly, special attention should be given to the physical and psychological health of detained children, whether they are together with their families or unaccompanied. 16
For this reason, in cases where it is necessary to shelter the migrant family, the only possible response according to the best interests of the child is for the family to be placed in a facility specially designed for families with children, in which no one is deprived of their liberty.17 Such centres should comply with a number of requirements in terms of infrastructure, activities and trained personnel, and be suited to the rights and interests of children. This approach can ensure that the best interests of the child are respected by harmonising the child’s right to personal freedom with the right to family life. The CRC Committee has stressed that, as a general rule, child migrants and asylum-seeking families should not be detained.18
Migration-related detention affects the rights of children in many other ways, even when children themselves are not detained. Detention of parents has a substantial, often irreversible, negative impact on children’s right to family life, as well as on many other child rights, especially where children are residents or citizens of the country of destination and parents are deported, or the family is separated.

Even when it does not lead to deportation, family separation due to detention has an immediate impact on child development, as well as on the psychological, spiritual, and material elements of the right to an adequate standard of living.19 The consequences are aggravated on a daily basis for the duration of parental detention. In such circumstances, the best interests of the child and other rights guaranteed by the Convention argue strongly that alternative measures to depriving parents of their liberty should be put in place.




  1. Deportation

Some countries deport individuals on the basis of migration status. This order is typically made without taking these individuals’ family circumstances into account, especially those of children that reside with parents in the country of destination.20 This can occur both when children are legal residents or nationals of the destination country and in cases where the entire family has irregular migration status. In addition, evidence from many countries reveals a trend of increasingly harsh deportation and detention policies that negatively impact basic human rights, such as the right to family life.


Deportation impacts children’s rights at many levels, far beyond family life. Articles 8 (right to maintain family relations) and 9 (right to not be separated from one’s parents) need to be taken into consideration when enacting decisions that might affect children. However, family separation as a consequence of deportation impacts many other rights guaranteed by the CRC. For example, parental deportation has an immediate negative effect on the fulfilment of parents’ obligations to their children (CRC art. 5), and can also affect children’s mental and emotional health (CRC art. 24) and/or educational development (CRC art. 28). Among the consequences for children of detention, deportation and family separation shown by evidence to date are feelings of loss or abandonment, leading to anxiety; anger toward parents, sometimes resulting in acting out or displaying aggressive behaviours; and feelings of shame and isolation. Children may also become distressed or depressed, and experience loss of appetite, sleep problems, and decreased cognitive and academic performance.21
Moreover, decisions calling for deportation contradict CRC commitments by States Parties with regard to child development – a fundamental principle of the Convention, guaranteed by article 6. As stated earlier, States Parties have positive duties to take appropriate measures to assist parents (and others responsible for the child) in providing an adequate standard of living for their children (CRC art. 27). When families are separated as a result of deportation orders, parents and guardians are often no longer able to provide a standard of living adequate for the child’s physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development. Further, States Parties also have a duty to “render appropriate assistance to parents and legal guardians in the performance of their child-rearing responsibilities” (CRC art. 18.2). Separating families from their children is a clear violation of this duty. By deporting parents, States Parties prevent them from fulfilling their primary responsibility for the child’s development, contradicting their obligations under the CRC. Deportation decisions also affect children’s short- and long-term mental, spiritual, and moral development.
In addition, children are rarely allowed to participate in deportation hearings. Their right to be heard is hardly ever recognised, despite the fact that the decision adopted may severely affect their rights and development. Such procedures and resulting deportation orders involve practices that also contradict the principle of the best interests of the child, instead prioritising migration control policy objectives.22

It is also important to note that expulsions usually entail a restriction on re-entering the country for a specified number of years or even indefinitely.23 This additional sanction further exacerbates the infringement of CRC rights. In particular, by not expeditiously, positively, and humanely facilitating family reunification, making re-entry impossible infringes upon article 10 of the Convention (family reunification). The violation of this right is aggravated considerably when alternative measures are adopted, such as placing children into adoption in the destination country against their will and that of their parents.


Deportation measures also discriminate against children of migrant parents, since it is the parents’ migration status that leads to undermining CRC rights. This is in breach of CRC article 2.2, which forbids any restriction to children’s rights based on their parents’ condition.
To remain in compliance with their commitments under the CRC, States Parties need to design mechanisms guaranteeing that the rights, opinions, and interests of children are taken into account during the deportation procedures of their parents, especially when they are residents or nationals of the country of origin.24 Further, given that children cannot be expelled from their own country, the State Party’s duty of protecting children and safeguarding their rights should be conducive to solutions that avoid family separation, such as granting residence status to the parents (see Annex II for examples of States that currently do so).
A holistic interpretation of the CRC should also constitute sufficient basis for States Parties to abstain from deporting irregular migrant families. Very often children migrated with their parents during infancy and have established strong social ties in the destination country. They may even have been born in host countries that do not recognise the principle of jus soli, and therefore do not grant them nationality. In these circumstances, or when children are fully integrated into the destination country, the impact of expulsion may severely affect the child’s rights and development. A case-by-case examination is essential when considering the deportation of families. A range of alternative responses are available and should be considered, including regularisation of the entire family’s status.
Through the CRC, States Parties are committed to give primacy to children’s rights, including family life, above any other consideration or interest. This obligation should be considered when designing and implementing migration policies. Migration laws should guarantee the rights of children, including those potentially affected by deportation measures. Implementation of these laws must also be carried out carefully, so that no discrimination or abuse of rights occurs. This requires a strong focus on training competent officials and participation of children in deportation procedures, among others.



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