The Rise and Fall of the ERPUM pilot: Tracing the European policy drive to deport unaccompanied minors

Martin Lemberg-Pedersen

Abstract

This working paper traces the institutional dynamics surrounding the European Return Platform for Unaccompanied Minors (ERPUM), the first ever EU pilot attempting to organize the administrative deportation of unaccompanied minors. The first phase of ERPUM was initiated in January 2011, and its second stage began in December 2012 and was then discontinued in June 2014. Its core members were Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands, and its observers were Denmark and Belgium. The pilot illustrates how bureaucratic networks in the European landscape of asylum policy interpreted the need to find “durable solutions” for unaccompanied minors as providing justification for institutionalizing their mass deportations. This paper is a follow-up to a workshop hosted by the RSC in 2013 on 'The Deportation of Unaccompanied Minors from the EU: Family Tracing and Government Accountability in the European Return Platform for Unaccompanied Minors (ERPUM) Project'
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationOxford. Department of International Development
PublisherRefugee Studies Centre
Pages1-42
Number of pages42
Publication statusPublished - 31 Mar 2015
SeriesRSC Working paper series
Number108

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