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Their Future, Their Voice: USCRI Launches New Report Centering the Voices of Displaced Children in Global Policy

June 23, 2026

Today, USCRI is proud to launch Their Future, Their Voice: Centering Displaced Children in Global Protection and Policy, a new report elevating the perspectives, experiences, and leadership of children and young people living through displacement.

READ THE REPORT

At a time when displacement remains at historic levels and pathways to safety are shrinking, children continue to bear a disproportionate share of the consequences. Across the world, they are navigating conflict, family separation, interrupted education, discrimination, and uncertainty — and too often, they are left out of the decisions, policies, and programs that shape their futures.

Their Future, Their Voice begins with a different belief: displaced children and youth are not simply recipients of protection. They are rights-holders, leaders, and experts in their own lives.

“Displaced children are at the heart of our work in communities across the United States and around the world, and they must also be at the center of our advocacy. That commitment has shaped our research, informed our partnerships, and ultimately inspired this report,” writes USCRI President and CEO Eskinder Negash in the opening letter to the report. “We offer this publication not as a definitive account… but as an invitation to act. We invite policymakers, practitioners, advocates, and community members to join us in championing the rights of displaced children, investing in their futures, and ensuring they have the support they need to thrive.”

Developed with refugee-led organizations, community partners, advocates, practitioners, and young people themselves, the report brings together stories and analysis from Sudan, Burundi, Uganda, Mexico, Pakistan, the United States, and beyond. Woven throughout are artwork, poetry, reflections, and first-hand accounts from children and young people — contributions that make clear that lasting solutions cannot be built without listening to and acting alongside the people most affected.

The report documents an urgent and widening gap between the rights displaced children are guaranteed and the realities they face. From eight million children out of school in Sudan to ongoing family separation in the United States to girls and children with disabilities routinely left behind. The report calls on governments, international organizations, civil society, and donors to:

  • Strengthen protections for displaced children, including by upholding family unity and ensuring children are never left invisible to protection systems.
  • Invest in education, mental health, menstrual health, nutrition, and child protection as essential commitments.
  • Expand meaningful participation of displaced children and youth, so they are partners in shaping the policies and decisions that impact their lives, not just recipients of their outcomes.
  • Resource local and refugee-led organizations as long-term partners, not afterthoughts.

Their Future, Their Voice urges all of us to listen to displaced children and youth and act with sustained solidarity and commitment. Victoria Walker, USCRI Policy Analyst and the lead report compiler and contributing author, writes in her letter to young people:

“Every child and young person deserves safety, opportunity, belonging, and the ability to pursue their dreams. Not someday, but now. You have rights. Your aspirations matter. Your education matters. Your well-being matters. Your leadership matters.”

Read the full report here: Their Future, Their Voice: Centering Displaced Children in Global Protection and Policy

 

Please email [email protected] with questions.

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