The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights

Anecdotal reports suggest migrant children at the US border have had to undergo age assessment procedures to prove to immigration officials they qualify for special protections afforded to those under age 18. There are a variety of methods to assess the chronological ages of minors, including imagin...

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Main Author: Ranit Mishori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Children
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/6/7/85
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spelling doaj-a099d16be04f405eb2c61eb85b99db022021-04-02T14:42:58ZengMDPI AGChildren2227-90672019-07-01678510.3390/children6070085children6070085The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s RightsRanit Mishori0Department of Family Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC 20007, USAAnecdotal reports suggest migrant children at the US border have had to undergo age assessment procedures to prove to immigration officials they qualify for special protections afforded to those under age 18. There are a variety of methods to assess the chronological ages of minors, including imaging studies such as X-rays of the wrist, teeth, or collarbone. However, these procedures have come under great scrutiny for being arbitrary and inaccurate, with a significant margin of error, because they are generally based on reference materials that do not take into account ethnicity, nutritional status, disease, and developmental history, considerations which are especially relevant for individuals coming from conflict and/or resource-constrained environments. Using these procedures for migration purposes represent an unethical use of science and medicine, which can potentially deprive minors with the protections that they are owed under US and international laws, and which may have devastating consequences. We should advocate for the creation special protocols, educate law enforcement and legal actors, ensure such procedures are carried out only as a last resort and by independent actors, emphasize child protection and always put the child’s best interest at the core.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/6/7/85age assessmentsmigrationchild-protectionmedico-legal ethicsforensic evaluations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ranit Mishori
spellingShingle Ranit Mishori
The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights
Children
age assessments
migration
child-protection
medico-legal ethics
forensic evaluations
author_facet Ranit Mishori
author_sort Ranit Mishori
title The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights
title_short The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights
title_full The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights
title_fullStr The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights
title_full_unstemmed The Use of Age Assessment in the Context of Child Migration: Imprecise, Inaccurate, Inconclusive and Endangers Children’s Rights
title_sort use of age assessment in the context of child migration: imprecise, inaccurate, inconclusive and endangers children’s rights
publisher MDPI AG
series Children
issn 2227-9067
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Anecdotal reports suggest migrant children at the US border have had to undergo age assessment procedures to prove to immigration officials they qualify for special protections afforded to those under age 18. There are a variety of methods to assess the chronological ages of minors, including imaging studies such as X-rays of the wrist, teeth, or collarbone. However, these procedures have come under great scrutiny for being arbitrary and inaccurate, with a significant margin of error, because they are generally based on reference materials that do not take into account ethnicity, nutritional status, disease, and developmental history, considerations which are especially relevant for individuals coming from conflict and/or resource-constrained environments. Using these procedures for migration purposes represent an unethical use of science and medicine, which can potentially deprive minors with the protections that they are owed under US and international laws, and which may have devastating consequences. We should advocate for the creation special protocols, educate law enforcement and legal actors, ensure such procedures are carried out only as a last resort and by independent actors, emphasize child protection and always put the child’s best interest at the core.
topic age assessments
migration
child-protection
medico-legal ethics
forensic evaluations
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/6/7/85
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