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coram children's legal centre
Stamp: Promoting children's rights

Latest News

Coram Children’s Legal Centre welcomes new Head of Legal Practice

Coram Children’s Legal Centre is delighted to announce the appointment of Rosalyn Akar Grams as the new head of our Legal Practice Unit. Rosalyn succeeds Noel Arnold, who held the position for the last seven years. Rosalyn is an experienced solicitor specialising in asylum, immigration and human rights cases and is an accredited supervisor under…

28/10/2019


CCLC welcomes automatic legal aid eligibility for separated children with immigration or nationality issues

Over a year after the policy change was announced, CCLC welcomes the formal reintroduction of legal aid for immigration and nationality law for unaccompanied and separated children in care. Since the passage of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (LASPO), CCLC has highlighted the negative impact of the removal of legal…

25/10/2019


CCLC’s Qaisar Sheikh ranked in Chambers and Partners 2020

We are pleased to announce that CCLC’s Qaisar Sheikh has been ranked in leading legal directory Chambers and Partners 2020 in the category of Education Law, alongside other leading solicitors in this area. Chambers and Partners comments: Qaisar Sheikh is well known in the market for his work in various types of cases, particularly EHC…

11/10/2019


All news

EU national children risk becoming ‘second Windrush generation’

Many European national children and young people who have grown up in the UK are at risk of becoming a ‘second Windrush’ generation, unable to work, unable open a bank account or drive a car and effectively barred from college, university and secondary healthcare, due to the complexity of their cases and lack of legal advice on how to secure permanent status, CCLC’s new report highlights.

There are over 900,000 EU national children in the UK who will soon be required to prove that they have the right to remain in the UK after Brexit to avoid becoming ‘undocumented’ after the end of the Brexit transition period (which will be 31 June 2021 or 31 December 2020 depending on whether the UK leaves the EU with a deal or not). The Home Office estimates that between 10 and 20% of all applicants will be vulnerable. 5,000 EU children are in local authority care, separated from their families.

Although the Government has repeatedly asserted that the application process will be ‘straightforward and streamlined’, many children and young people will have complex cases, especially if they live separately from their parents.

During a recent pilot of the scheme aimed at vulnerable individuals, CCLC found that in a fifth of cases the child did not have the necessary documentation and more than half of cases required detailed advice on immigration and nationality law that could only be provided by qualified legal professionals.

Tens of thousands of European national children may already be eligible for British citizenship but without funded legal advice will not about their eligibility and how to apply, or may be prevented from doing so by exorbitant application fees – the fee to apply for a child to register as a British citizen is £1,012.

The report calls for:

  • Local authorities to take positive steps to identify European national children in their care and assist them to access identity documents, legal advice and representation.
  • European national children who are eligible to register as British citizens to not be required to pay a fee to do so.
  • Legal aid to be made available for all European national children and young people’s cases

Read the report Uncertain futures: the EU settlement scheme and children and young people’s right to remain in the UK

Read more about our work on Brexit and children’s rights

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Our organisation's individual solicitors are regulated and authorised by the Solicitors Regulation Authority  

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