Event Details

Title: Child Health and Well-Being: Improving Services for Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children
Date: Tuesday 22nd June 2010
Time: 10:00am — 4:30pm
Venue: The Guoman Charing Cross Hotel, London
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“ The UK Border Agency will seek to ensure that children are treated in a way that safeguards them, promotes their welfare and promotes their upbringing by their parents ... Are seen first, foremost and fully as children rather than simply as migrants subject to immigration control ... Keeping children safe from harm has to be defined widely but sensibly. ‘Harm’ means the ill-treatment or impairment of health or development of a child. ‘Development’ means physical, intellectual, emotional, social or behavioural development; ’health’ means physical or mental health; and ’ill-treatment’ includes sexual abuse and forms of ill-treatment which are not physical …”
— UK Border Agency Code of Practice for Keeping Children Safe from Harm, December 2008

“ We are alarmed by the accounts … of traffickers training children to present themselves as unaccompanied asylum seekers in order to be placed in insecure care, often near the port of entry, which the trafficker can persuade or coerce them to leave … We recognise that one element of the problem is that many have not been identified as victims of trafficking, but we are of the view that no unaccompanied asylum-seeking child should be placed in such a vulnerable situation … ”
— House of Commons Home Affairs Committee Report on Human Trafficking in the UK, May 2009

Overview

Since 2003, the Government has sought to underpin its pledge to ensure that every child grows up happy, healthy, safe and able to fulfil their potential in life. Whilst the Care Matters implementation plan, ‘Time to Deliver for Children in Care’ (2008) endeavours to bridge the gap between national policy and local reality for children in care, the Government acknowledges that much more must be done to promote the well-being of unaccompanied asylum seeking children in care.

Having fled traumatic experiences and travelled great distances, unaccompanied children seeking asylum in the UK often arrive with complex psychological needs, poor physical health and no support network. Immigration procedures, isolation and inconsistent access to health, social, financial and educational services can add to these negative experiences and cause long term damage to their well-being and development. As a result of the serious lack of provision of basic needs, asylum seeking children are particularly vulnerable to homelessness, poverty, crime, trafficking and exploitation. Furthermore, the large numbers of asylum seeking children that go missing from local authority care has strengthened calls for greater multi-agency working, robust support and suitable secure housing in order to safeguard the welfare and well-being of vulnerable asylum seeking children.

This special symposium, hosted by the Centre for Parliamentary Studies, provides an invaluable opportunity for UKBA staff, children’s services, education sector and third sector practitioners to discuss current progress in improving the health and well-being of asylum seeking children. The Symposium will consider how to develop greater multi-agency working to ensure every child receives the level of specialist care they need and are able to access the services necessary to help them overcome poor physical and psychological health and adapt to cultural, religious and language differences, to enable them to succeed in education and integrate into their local community. Delegates will have the opportunity to debate, network and share best practice in improving outcomes for unaccompanied asylum seeking children.

Programme

09:15 Registration and Morning Refreshments
10:00 Chair’s Welcome and Introduction

Elaine Chase, Senior Research Officer, Thomas Coram Research Unit, Institute of Education (confirmed)
10:15 Panel Session One:
Improving Services and Promoting the Health and Well-Being of Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children
  • Ensuring the Physical and Psychological Wellbeing of UASC
  • Removing Barriers to a Comprehensive Education
  • Overcoming Language, Cultural and Religious Differences, Providing Positive Activities and Assisting Integration into the Community
  • Providing the Appropriate Legal Advise and Ensuring Access to all Necessary and Specialist Services
Judith Dennis, Policy Advisor, Refugee Council (confirmed)
Nadine Finch, Barrister, Garden Court Chambers (confirmed)
Dr Mano Candappa, Senior Research Officer, Institute of Education (confirmed)
11:15 Morning Refreshments
11:30 Open Floor Discussion and Debate with Panel One
12:30 Networking Lunch
13:30 Panel Session Two:
Safeguarding the Security and Welfare of Vulnerable Children
  • Improving Training to Identify and Safeguard Vulnerable or Trafficked Children
  • Preventing the Exploitation of the Care Home System through Increased Supervision, Secure Housing and Multi-Agency Working
  • Working in Partnership to Deter Involvement in Crime and Reduce Reoffending
  • Meeting Basic Economic Needs and Providing a Comprehensive Safety Net
Philip Ishola, Service Manager for Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children, London Borough of Harrow (confirmed)
Victoria Hull, Director, Care Leavers' Association (confirmed)
14:30 Afternoon Refreshments
14:45 Open Floor Discussion and Debate with Panel Two
15:45 Chair’s Summary and Closing Comments
15:55 Networking Reception
16:30 Symposium Close

Who Should Attend?

  • Vulnerable Persons Coordinators
  • Child Protection & Looked-After Children Teams
  • Local Safeguarding Children Boards
  • Missing Persons Units
  • Port & Airport Authorities
  • Central Government Departments & Agencies including UKBA, FCO, DFID, CPS, SOCA & Home Office
  • Local Authority Officers & Councillors
  • Police Service & Police Authorities
  • Fire Services
  • Housing Officers & Associations
  • PCT & Health Service Professionals
  • Victim Support Representatives
  • Drug & Alcohol Action Teams
  • Community Support Officers
  • Children & Youth Services
  • Social Workers & Social Services
  • Criminal Justice Practitioners
  • Asylum & Refugee Groups
  • Legal Professionals
  • Equality & Diversity Practitioners
  • Third Sector Practitioners
  • Faith Organisations
  • Academics & Researchers

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