Bangladesh: Foreign Aid Cuts Affect Rohingya Children’s Education
Support Community-led Schools for Refugee Students

All too often, the thousands of unaccompanied children arriving in foreign lands without parents or caregivers find themselves trapped in their status as migrants, with officials giving little consideration to their needs and the risks they face as children. They may be denied access to adequate medical services and education; abused and mistreated by police, guards, and other detainees; and unable to seek asylum. They may languish in detention facilities, in conditions that are often degrading and inhumane, and many children are held in cells with adults who are strangers. Children held in detention, particularly for long periods with no release in sight, suffer lasting consequences, physically and mentally. Detention can create new traumas and exacerbate previous ones.
Support Community-led Schools for Refugee Students
The US Expulsion of Third-Country Nationals to Costa Rica
The US Expulsion of Third-Country Nationals to Panama
Denied Right to Seek Asylum and Due Process; Held in Incommunicado Detention
Plot by Senior Officials, Some Slated for New Posts, to Discourage Migrants
Convoluted Residency Requirements, Costs, Discrimination Impede Access to Schools
State Legislature Should Impose Oversight, Deny Funding Request
Baitul Mahabbah Centers Detain Refugees, Violate Children’s Rights
Government Should Ensure Schools Enroll Children Regardless of Status
Decision Not to Deport 19 Children Should be Expanded to All Refugees