U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
  • LANGUAGE OPTIONS


Policy Brief: To Support Children’s Rights Domestically and Internationally, the United States Must Ratify the UNCRC

October 18, 2022

As we look forward to Universal Children’s Day on November 20, 2022, USCRI explores the United Nation’s Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) in this week’s policy brief.

The UNCRC is the most widely adopted human rights pact in the world, signed and ratified by every country recognized by the U.N., except the United States. The treaty was the first to establish international standards on the rights of children. If the United States wants to continue to promote child rights internationally, and affirm the rights of children domestically, the country must ratify the UNCRC. Additionally, USCRI recommends that the United States change its state laws to be in line with the treaty, and that Congress pass a law to make family separation at the border illegal.

Click here to read the full Policy and Advocacy Report by USCRI.


Related Posts

Rohingya Genocide Remembrance Day: Eight...

Seizing the attention and sympathy of the international community in 2017, more than 700,000 Rohingya refugees were forced to flee...

READ FULL STORY

Independence Day of Ukraine: Situation...

As Ukraine commemorates its independence on August 24, displacement continues to affect millions of people in Ukraine and across the...

READ FULL STORY

Azorean Refugee Act: Reviving Its...

In 1957, the Capelinhos volcano began its submarine explosion, damaging houses and farmlands. For the next 13 months, the eruption...

READ FULL STORY