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Children in Migration
Survey
This project offers accommodation to unaccompanied minors who are recently aged out. The current real estate market in T...
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Identification
1. Name of the project/practice
Shakan – ‘Junges Wohnen’
2. Name of submitting person/organisation/practitioner
Red Cross EU Office
3. Role of the submitting person/organisation/practitioner in the good practice
4. Type of organisations implementing the practice
Academia/University
National authority
Regional authority
Local authority
Non-governmental organisation
International organisation
Private organisation
Private person
Other type of organisation
4.1. Please specify type of organisation if different than the options above
5. Description of the lead organisation
The Austrian Red Cross is part of the National Red Cross and Red Crescent societies, the International Committee of the Red Cross and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent societies. This makes the Austrian Red Cross part of a worldwide movement. The Austrian Red Cross follows seven fundamental principles: Humanity, Impartiality, Neutrality, Independence, Voluntary Service, Unity, and Universality.
6. Name and description of partner organisations
Tyrol branch
Scope and activities
7. Type of activity
Capacity-building and training of duty-bearers (national, regional, local authorities, others involved in delivery of services) to respect rights
Services delivered directly to children (including on access to their rights) (e.g. child-sensitive information, support services, clinics (mobile or other), reception, transnational cooperation, etc.
Promoting rights-based responses and actions (e.g. advocacy, working with communities, implementing standards)
Community engagement (e.g. local volunteers or outreach, inclusion, neighborhood initiatives)
Other type of activity
7.1. Please describe other type of activity (if the type of activity is not listed above)
8. Sector
Immediate protection needs on arrival / humanitarian relief (e.g. individual needs assessment)
Identification and registration (e.g. child-friendly biometric enrollment, measures to prevent and to respond to unaccompanied children going missing, age assessment procedures)
Reception: accommodation (e.g. reception related measures to promote and respond to children going missing, foster care, semi-independent living, housing for families, different forms of alternative care for unaccompanied children)
Reception: access to services (educational support, access to health care, assistance to newborns or toddlers, psychosocial support, leisure, integration-related measures)
Access to status determination procedures/procedural safeguards (guardianship services, multidisciplinary age assessment, family reunification/unity, family-tracing, prioritisation of children’s status determination procedures (urgency principle), legal assistance, child-sensitive information)
Prevention of deprivation of liberty (General Comment No 23 UNCRC) / non-custodial solutions
Durable solutions (best interests determination, integration, return, resettlement or reunification with family in a third country)
Other sector
8.1. Please describe other sector (if the sector is not listed above)
9. Target group of children in migration
All children
Unaccompanied or separated children
Children in families
Children with disabilities
LGBTQI children
Children seeking international protection
Teenagers close to adulthood
Child victims of trafficking
Child victims of violence
Child victims of sexual violence
Other target group of children in migration
9.1. Other target group of children in migration (if the target group is not listed above)
10. Specific target of the practice
Boys
Girls
All children
11. Target group based on age
0-18 years
0-3 years
4-6 years
7-12 years
13-18 years
Other age group
11.1. Please specify the age group
18-21 years
12. Keywords to describe the good practice
Age assessment
Capacity-building
Child-sensitive information
Children with families
Data collection
Dublin
Education
Non-custodial solutions
Family reunification
Family-tracing
Foster care
Guardian
Guardianship
Healthcare
Humanitarian relief
Identification
Integration
Leisure
Local community
Psychosocial support
Reception
Semi-independent living
Sport
Training
Trauma-informed practice
Unaccompanied children
13. Time frame
13.1. Start date of activity
Date
13.2. End date of activity
Date
14. Geographical scope
EU
Albania
Austria
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Kosovo
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Montenegro
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
United Kingdom
14.1. Other geographical scope
15. Region, municipality or locality concerned
16. General description of activities
This project offers accommodation to unaccompanied minors who are recently aged out. The current real estate market in Tyrol is very difficult to access to foreigners and often not affordable. ARC rents apartments and passes them on to young adults within the framework of a usage agreement. At the end of the contract period with ARC, the clients themselves is given the opportunity to become tenants of the apartments. The intention is to facilitate the sustainable integration of the formerly unaccompanied minor refugees into the housing market. In cooperation with the child and youth welfare, the project offers assistance and support to the young tenants and aims to foster their integration.
17. Objectives of the activities
The project aims at facilitating the integration of unaccompanied young migrants by providing them with accomodation and sustaining them with educational activities and integration in the labor market.
18. Results
The Austrian Red Cross have rented over 50 apartments within the project so far. 110 had an accomodation thanks to the activity. Besides the accomodation, a large number of youth have started an education or found a job.
19. Challenges
The housing market in Tyrol is extremely tight. Apartments are expensive and in great demand. Our clients are confronted with intersectional exclusions. These make it almost impossible for them to find accommodation themselves.
20. Lessons learned
Additional Information
21. Funding
Funded by national authorities
Funded by the organisation in charge of the implementation
Funded by regional authorities
Funded by local authorities
Funded by private donor or charity
Other funding
21.1. Please specify other funding:
22. Funded by EU Programme
- None -
Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund (AMIF)
Development Cooperation Instrument
Emergency Assistance Scheme under the AMIF/ISF (EMAS)
Emergency Support Instrument (ESI)
Erasmus+
EU Compact with Jordan
EU Compact with Lebanon
EU Health Programme
EU Humanitarian Assistance
EU Regional Trust Fund in Response to the Syrian Crisis
EU Trust Fund for Africa
European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD)
European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights
European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)
European Social Fund (ESF)
Facility for Refugees in Turkey
Fund for Aid to the Most Deprived (FEAD)
Horizon 2020
Internal Security Fund (ISF)
Mobility Partnership Facility
Rights, Equality and Citizenship Programme
23. Approximate costs per year
24. Currency
EUR - Euro
RON - Romanian Leu
SEK - Swedish Kroner
PLN - Polish Zloty
NOK - Norwegian Kroner
HUF - Hungarian Forint
ISK - Icelandic Kroner
LTL - Lithuanian Litas
DKK - Danish Kroner
CZK - Czech Crown
BGN - Bulgarian Lev
GBP - British Pound
HRK - Croatian Kuna
25. Costs per objective or per work package
26. Other relevant information on budget and costs
27. Formal evaluation
28. Child safeguarding policy
29. Child safeguarding policy link
30. Child safeguarding policy document
31. Link to good practice / organisations' website
https://www.roteskreuz.at/tirol/migration-suchdienst/shakan-junges-wohnen/
32. Relevant documents for good practice/organisation
33. Is there any extra information you want to provide not already covered in the replies to the questions above?
Contact Information
34. You can add up to five contacts
1
2
3
4
5
34.1.1. Name
Barbara Strele
34.1.2. Phone
+43 6648248767
34.1.3. Email
barbara.strele@roteskreuz-tirol.at
34.2.1. Name
34.2.2. Phone
34.2.3. Email
34.3.1. Name
34.3.2. Phone
34.3.3. Email
34.4.1. Name
34.4.2. Phone
34.4.3. Email
34.5.1. Name
34.5.2. Phone
34.5.3. Email
Red Cross EU Office
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