An Analysis of Children’s Concerns in Migration Legal Instruments in Ghana
Abstract
Migration has become a phenomenon that affects the lives of many people today. Children
are affected as well in diverse ways by migration. Most countries lack comprehensive
policies on migration which can harness its gains for mutual benefits and reduce its negative
impacts.
Meanwhile, migration has become a major process in many populations, including Ghana’s.
Children have also been participating in migration in various ways; as independent migrants,
as moving along with migrating parents or other adults and as left behind by their migrant
parents.
It is against the background that migration laws and other instruments do not often have
perspectives of children considered that the present study examined how existing laws in
Ghana related to migration have concerns, if any of children.
Ghana was the first country to have ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC),
yet there are serious situations that threaten their rights and wellbeing such as the negative
effects of migration that are probably not addressed with policies or legal instruments. Other
situations of migration also make them vulnerable to separation from families, exploitation
and abuse.
Meanwhile, the Millennium Summit of the UN held in 2000 adopted eight goals popularly
known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); and most target children.
The present study examined the following laws (legal instruments), The Immigration Act,
2000 (Act 573), The Citizenship Act, 2000 (Act 591), The Refugee Law, 1992 (PNDCL
305D) and The Human Trafficking Act, 2005 (Act 694), and the finding show that it is The
Human Trafficking Act, 2005 that explicitly mentions children and their concerns.
The study argues that it is important that migration laws and policies have concerns of
children considered. Children should be specifically mentioned in them and their needs
adequately provided.
Description
Thesis (MA)
Keywords
Migration, Children, Phenomenon, Convention