Abstract

The number of unaccompanied minors (UAMs) arriving in the European Union (EU) has been increasing dramatically over recent years resulting in the formulation of EU policy directives around safeguarding and well-being. Notably, the majority of UAMs enter Europe irregularly through two main gateways to the European continent: via Italy, using the Central Mediterranean Sea route; or through Greece, transiting through the Eastern Mediterranean route from Turkey, mostly via sea. Profiles of UAMs travelling via the two different routes are significantly diverse, reflecting Italy’s and Greece’s geographical proximity to North Africa and the Middle East, respectively. Although Italy has witnessed a decline since 2018 (Todaro and Romano 2019), the two countries have faced a significant increase in UAMs, and this has required a considerable reorganisation of the reception systems and, more generally, of their welfare systems. However, difficulties in securing adequate reception for UAMs seeking protection have persisted in both countries. Through an analysis of the impact of the pandemic on the Italian and Greek reception systems and social interventions with UAMs, we utilised a multiple embedded case study approach within a comparative analysis, to identify key changes in the main services which should be guaranteed to minors—namely, hosting/housing, guardianship, foster care, family/relatives reunification, school integration, language, job training for care leaving, and preparation for leaving care after 18 years (Di Rosa 2017; Buchanan and Kallinikaki 2018; Barn et al. 2020). Against a background of critical reviews of the main issues related to policies and reported social work practice in a context of COVID-19 precarity, set within a wider EU framework, this paper contributes to the literature with an analysis of the current situation and the tightening of the conditions of reception, inclusion and integration that await UAMs in these gateway countries today. We conclude that with the suspension of key services and amenities, and with a practical halt to the due process of immigration and asylum, social workers are facing a difficult challenge to prevent the deterioration of UAMs’ mental health and well-being.

Highlights

  • By drawing on some relevant literature, organisational reports and on field observations, in the sections below, we sketch out the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the context of the reception systems for unaccompanied minors (UAMs) in Italy and Greece, through an analysis of existing criticalities and of measures adopted as the social work response to UAMs during this COVID-19 health crisis

  • Guardians and operators who follow unaccompanied minors are concerned about the consequences that the interruption of school, vocational training, and internships caused by the COVID-19 emergency may entail with respect to the conversion of the residence permit at the age of 18, and in general to the path of inclusion of the minors they are following

  • This paper has explored how the reception systems for UAMs in two gateway countries to Europe, namely, Italy and Greece, has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and how a tightening of the living conditions for minors hosted in these places has been seen (Noury and Leone 2020)

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Summary

Background

UNCRC (1989) can be said to safeguard the rights of all children, including unaccompanied minors (UAMs), in relation to Article 2 on non-discrimination Such protection is broadly encompassed in mainstream public policy for all children and applicable to UAMs in those country contexts. Greece and Italy serve not just as short-term transit countries, but as long-term host that seek to provide a range of services and support to UAMs (Pechtelidis 2020). The so-called “illegality” or “irregularity” can be a response to restrictive immigration controls, and a process and/or migration strategy, rather than a defined “end-state” (Jordan and Düvell 2002; Bloch and Chimienti 2011)

Legal Obligations in the EU towards Unaccompanied Minors
Unaccompanied Minors in Italy
Critical Issues in the Reception System during the Pandemic
Guardianship
Implication for Social Work Intervention
Family Reunions
Legal Status
Health Rights
Unaccompanied Minors in Greece
Implications for Social Work Practice
Accommodation
Relocation and Family Reunion
Findings
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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