Children, Human Rights and Temporary Labour Migration
Protecting the Child-Parent Relationship
Abstract
This book focuses on the neglected yet critical issue of how the global migration of millions of parents as low-waged migrant workers impacts the rights of their children under international human rights law. The work provides a systematic analysis and critique of how the restrictive features of policies governing temporary labour migration interfere with provisions of the Convention on the Rights of the Child that protect the child-parent relationship and parental role in children’s lives. Combining social and legal research, it identifies both potential harms to children’s well-being caused by prolonged child-parent separation and State duties to protect this relationship, which is deliberately disrupted by temporary labour migration policies. The book boldly argues that States benefitting from the labour of migrant workers share responsibility under international human rights law to mitigate harms to the children of these workers, including by supporting effective measures to maintain transnational child-parent relationships. It identifies measures to incorporate children’s best interests into temporary labour migration policies, offering ways to reduce interferences with children’s family rights. This book fills a gap that emerges at the intersection of child rights studies, migration research and existing literature on the purported nexus between labour migration and international development. It will be a valuable resource for academics, researchers and policymakers working in these areas.
Keywords
Company, commercial and competition law: general; Jurisprudence and general issues; Administrative jurisdiction and public administration; Law: Human rights and civil liberties; Citizenship and nationality law; Family law: children; International law; Employment and labour law: general; Public Law; Industrial arbitration and negotiation; Human rights, civil rights; Central / national / federal government policies; Migration, immigration and emigration; Development studiesDOI
10.4324/9781003028000ISBN
9781000418729, 9781003028000, 9780367462994, 9781032037868, 9781000418729Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2021Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Routledge Research in Asylum, Migration and Refugee Law,Classification
Private or civil law: general
Jurisprudence and general issues
Constitutional and administrative law: general
Law: Human rights and civil liberties
Citizenship and nationality law
Family law: marriage, separation and divorce
International law
Employment and labour law: general
Laws of specific jurisdictions and specific areas of law
Trade unions
Human rights, civil rights
Central / national / federal government policies
Migration, immigration and emigration
Relating to migrant groups / diaspora communities or peoples
Development studies