Left without protection? The legal and policy gaps in the European Union’s approach to climate-displaced children’s right to education
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Abstract
Climate-induced displacement is a growing global concern, yet children affected by this phenomenon remain largely
invisible in European legal and policy frameworks. This research investigates the extent to which the European
Union (EU) protects the right to education of climate-displaced children from third countries, whose rights are not
protected by current asylum and migration systems, and who therefore face exceptional vulnerability. The study
addresses three core questions: the effectiveness of current EU normative protections, the implications of lacking a
legal definition of “climate refugee,” and the necessity and impact of formal recognition to guarantee the right to
education. The research uses qualitative methodology based on a child-rights-based approach to analyze EU primary
and secondary law together with relevant jurisprudence and international human rights instruments. The research
shows major normative and implementation gaps which become worse because of the lack of legal recognition
that prevents consistent education access across Member States. The analysis shows that legal recognition, which is
normatively binding, must be accompanied by parallel policy reform to operationalise children’s rights on the ground.
The research develops a reform strategy which unites legal frameworks with administrative tools to resolve identified
gaps. protecting their educational rights in the management of migration in the EU. The research establishes a
framework that connects legal status to policy access to protect EU child rights from climate vulnerabilities.
Description
Second semester University: KU Leuven