Securitising Children Rights: Victims and Heirs of Terrorism. A Critical Analysis of France’s Approach to Children of Foreign Terrorist Fighters
Securitising Children Rights: Victims and Heirs of Terrorism. A Critical Analysis of France’s Approach to Children of Foreign Terrorist Fighters
Date
2020
Authors
Caruana, Deborah
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
The complex reality of children of ISIS foreign terrorist fighters
stranded in inhumane camps in Syria presents an unprecedented
phenomenon but one for which a rights-based approach exists under
the international child protection framework. As children affected by
armed conflict and terrorism, they are legally entitled to protection
primarily as victims. Yet, their countries of origin are failing to respect
their international obligations and lack the political will to repatriate,
rehabilitate and (re)integrate these children back in a safe environment
according to the children’s best interests. A critical case-study analysis of
France’s approach reveals how a securitised response to these children is
not allowing for a rights-based approach to even be considered. Through
a dialectic relationship between political discourse, public opinion and
media coverage, a climate of fear from exceptional terrorism threats and
misinformed inflammatory discourse surrounding radicalisation led to
dehumanising and exclusionary narratives which situate the terrorist
outside the bounds of humanity or protection of law. These children are
inheriting the effects of such narratives by being identified as terrorists
themselves and being failed recognition of their dual victim status as
children and child soldiers under international law.
Keywords: child rights, discourse, foreign terrorist fighters,
radicalisation, security.
Description
Second semester University: University College Dublin - National University of Ireland.
Keywords
children rights,
victims,
terrorism,
international obligations,
security,
France,
child soldiers