ECPAT UK BRIEFING

Part 5 of the Nationality and Borders Bill will affect all child victims of trafficking, including British national children, and will be detrimental to unaccompanied children at significant risk of exploitation. 

This briefing supports a number of changes to the Bill, including an amendment which would exempt victims of modern slavery, exploitation or trafficking from many of the provisions in Part 5 if they were under 18 when they became a victim, and would ensure the best interests of children in all decisions about them, including in deciding leave to remain.

CLICK HERE to access the ECPAT UK briefing

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JOINT BRIEFING

The anti-slavery sector is aligned in calling for the Bill to include a new clause which seeks to explicitly protect children and exempt them
from the most devastating provisions of Part 5.

CLICK HERE to access the joint briefing 

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JOINT BRIEFING

Clause 59 of the Nationality and Borders Bill raises the threshold for identifying a victim of modern slavery, and for a victim accessing the National Referral Mechanism. This briefing explains the need for putting a fair and clear definition of the threshold on the face of the Bill to ensure victims aren’t needlessly blocked from accessing support.

CLICK HERE to access the joint briefing 

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JOINT BRIEFING

Part 4 of the Nationality and Borders Bill contains sweeping changes to the current age assessment process. The Refugee and Migrant Children’s Consortium, a coalition of over 60 organisations, has repeatedly set out its views in detail to the government but to date there has been little proper engagement or response to its key concerns. This briefing puts forward the new clause 64A*, which sets out what an expert and fair age assessment process should look like.

CLICK HERE to access the joint briefing