The Migrant Children’s Project (MCP) has been promoting the rights of refugee and migrant children, young people and families for over 10 years, striving to ensure that they receive the protection and support they need.

The strength of the project is its comprehensive approach to changing individuals’ lives, as well as law, policy and practice through training to frontline professionals, legal advice and representation, strategic litigation and policy advocacy to ensure the best outcomes for migrant children. It is the interplay between the different areas covered that we believe allows for systemic change and the greatest impact.

The project works towards three core goals:

Advice and representation

The MCP advice line offers free and confidential advice on the rights of migrant children and young people and issues affecting them, including children who are separated and those in families.

We also provide direct face to face advice and representation in Greater London, working to help young people address their immediate needs, such as assisting with access to local authority support, but also the immigration issues that underlie their exclusion from mainstream services.

Download the Migrant Children’s Project leaflet

Training and guidance

The Migrant Children’s Project helps professionals and practitioners to understand the rights and entitlements of this group of children and young people, and how they can be supported. Find out more about our training courses.

We have produced over 30 fact sheets on legal issues affecting young refugee and migrants, and Seeking Support: a guide to the rights and entitlements of separated children, is a comprehensive, practical guide to ensuring that unaccompanied and separated children receive the care and protection they need.

To receive our monthly email update with the latest news and information relating to migrant children, sign up for our newsletter.

Policy and research

In addition to the MCP’s capacity-building and awareness-raising work directly with practitioners and professionals, it seeks to use research and policy advocacy, combining specialist technical knowledge about the domestic and international law with evidence from its front-line work, to ensure children’s rights are embedded in law and in practice. It does this through:

Coram Children’s Legal Centre co-chairs the Refugee Children’s Consortium, a group of NGOs working collaboratively to ensure that the rights and needs of refugee children are respected in accordance with relevant domestic, regional and international standards. It also co-chairs the National Asylum Stakeholder Forum Children’s Subgroup with the Home Office.

Evidence from the Migrant Children’s Project has also formed the basis for a number of significant research reports, including on undocumented migrants in the UK, Growing Up In a Hostile Environment: The rights of undocumented migrant children in the UK; the age assessment process, Happy Birthday? Disputing the age of children in the immigration system; and advice provision, Navigating the System: Advice provision for young refugees and migrants.


The ongoing work of the Migrant Children’s Project is generously funded by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation, The Pears Foundation, Trust for London, Comic Relief, Esmee Fairbairn, The Legal Education Foundation, The Big Lottery and The Stategic Legal Fund for Vulnerable Young Migrants.

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