Rethinking America

US Policy on Immigrant Children Violates the CRC

The US is the only country in the world that hasn’t yet ratified the CRC — the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Both the Reagan and the Bush Sr. administrations played an important role in drafting the treaty.

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Takeaways


  • The US is the only country in the world that hasn’t yet ratified the CRC -- the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
  • The CRC calls for children to be free from violence and abuse, and compels governments to provide them adequate nutrition and health care.
  • Children have been separated from their parents and kept in steel cages, a brutal aggression against those most vulnerable.
  • The Trump administration’s policy on immigrant children hurts the reputation of the US and its system of justice in the world.

A Salvadoran father and daughter who drowned while attempting to seek asylum in the United States are the latest victims of a policy that has cost the lives and seriously affected the health of hundreds of people, most of them children.

Children have been separated from their parents and kept in steel cages, a brutal aggression against those most vulnerable.

The mistreatment of children and the separation from their parents violates basic tenets of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), an internationally recognized agreement that establishes a comprehensive set of goals for individual nations to improve children’s lives.

Although the convention has worldwide recognition and support, the United States is the only country in the world that hasn’t yet ratified the CRC.

Both the Ronald Reagan and the George H.W. Bush administrations played an important role in drafting the treaty, which was signed by the U.S. government in 1995, indicating the nation’s intent to consider ratification.

The next step, so far unfulfilled by the United States, is for the President and his advisors to draft a Statement of Reservations, Understandings and Declarations to be presented to the Senate for its “advice and consent.”
Upon Senate approval by a two-thirds majority, the treaty goes back to the President for ratification.

The Convention

The Convention calls for children to be free from violence and abuse, and compels governments to provide them adequate nutrition and health care.

It also demands that children receive equal treatment regardless of gender, race or cultural background, and have the right to express their opinions and have freedom of thought in matters affecting them. Further, it addresses the rights of children with disabilities.

In addition, the CRC emphasizes the primacy and importance of the role, authority and responsibility of parents and family and is consistent with the principles contained in the U.S. Bill of Rights.

Ratification of the convention has been endorsed by about a hundred organizations in the United States, among them the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Baptist Churches, the American Bar Association, the National Education Association and the Child Welfare League of America.

Strong opposition

Given this level of endorsements, why hasn’t the United States ratified the CRC?

The convention has found a notable degree of opposition within the Senate and in the public, in part from a number of religious groups, as well as among those who claim it conflicts with the U.S. Constitution.

Several among these have portrayed the Convention as a threat to national sovereignty, states’ rights, the child-parent relationship and parental rights.

However, Lawrence S. Wittner, a Professor of History emeritus at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Albany has indicated that although some current U.S. laws clash with the Convention’s child protection features, most U.S. laws are in line with the Convention.

Regarding the claim that the Convention can override the U.S. Constitution, the Supremacy Law of that Constitution establishes no treaty can override it.

In addition, the Convention does not grant any international body enforcement authority over the United States or its citizens, but only obligates the parties to the Convention to submit periodic reports regarding progress on the provisions of the treaty.

The Trump administration’s policy on immigrant children not only does a disservice to children trying to come into the United States, it also hurts the reputation of the United States and its system of justice in the world.

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About César Chelala

César Chelala is a global health consultant and contributing editor for The Globalist. [New York, United States]

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