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Published with license by Koninklijke Brill nv | doi: 10.1163/15718182-31010002
© Vasileia Digidiki and Jacqueline Bhabha, 2023 | ISSN: 0927-5568 (pr int) 1571-8182 (online)
The Hidden Costs of Unaccompanied Child
Migration
Vasileia Digidiki
fxb Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University,
Boston, MA, USA
Corresponding author
vdigidik@hsph.harvard.edu
Jacqueline Bhabha
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Human Rights at Harvard
University, Boston, MA, USA
jbhabha@hsph.harvard.edu
Abstract
Dramatic reductions in refugee resettlement numbers, restrictions on asylum access
and growing externalisation of humanitarian protection have significantly curtailed
legal migration pathways for distress migrants. This continues to be the case despite
well-established international legal obligations requiring states to protect humanitarian
migrants and afford children, in particular, a series of protective procedures. We argue
that unaccompanied child migrants are disproportionately disadvantaged by these
restrictive measures because other avenues for legal migration – for work, for family
reunification, for educational and cultural activities – are generally not open to them.
As restrictions increase, unaccompanied children adopt self-initiated, challenging
strategies to pay the significant costs of the journeys they embark on, a departure from
more linear, “traditional” trajectories towards safety. This article presents qualitative
data collected in Greece, site of the largest European distress migrant arrivals in recent
years, to discuss the growing cost of irregular mobility for unaccompanied children
and the role that exploitation-funded earning plays in enabling their migrations today.
Keywords
Child migration – unaccompanied – Greece – mobility strategies – exploitation
The International Journal of Children’s Rights
31 (2023) 114–136
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