Community Sponsorship

Last updated

Community Sponsorship is a UK government-backed, volunteer-led refugee resettlement scheme. Inspired by the Canadian Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program of over 40 years, Community Sponsorship was introduced in the UK in 2016. The scheme enables groups of local volunteers to support a refugee family for their first year in the UK. [1] [2] It is eligible to those from Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt who are displaced due to the Syrian crisis.

Contents

From the start of the new UK Resettlement Scheme (UKRS) due to launch in 2020, all those resettled by Community Sponsorship will be counted in addition to government targets, making it the only way for people in the UK to directly increase the number of refugees coming to the country legally.

The scheme is supported by UK refugee charities and high-profile individuals such as the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby. [2]

Programme

Refugee sponsor groups can be approved to receive and support a family for their first year only after attending training by charity Reset, [3] and receiving approval by the Home Office.

Collectively, the group will help the family to access education, English lessons, welfare support, healthcare, and employment. They must also source accommodation that will be available to the refugee family throughout their first 2 years in the UK.

The support is intended to increase the family's ability to integrate into their local community, rebuild their lives, and become independent quickly.

Refugee selection

Community Sponsorship is currently open to refugees affected by the Syrian crisis living in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt. When the UK transitions to the UKRS, eligibility will still be determined according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)’s vulnerability criteria, but with a global scope.

The UK government and UNHCR work to identify the most vulnerable refugees for resettlement, [4] prioritising those who cannot be supported where they came from. This includes women and children, those needing medical care, and survivors of violence or torture.

Refugee sponsor groups

Refugee sponsor groups are formed of volunteers who may be friends, neighbours, colleagues, or family members. In order to support a refugee family, they must attend rigorous training provided by Home Office-funded charity, Reset Communities and Refugees, who also help groups throughout the year that they are supporting the family.

Groups submit an application to the UK Home Office in order to be approved. Gaining formal support from a registered charity (who become a group's 'Lead Sponsor'), and securing local authority consent is also an essential part of an application. A Lead Sponsor has legal responsibility for the sponsor group, whilst the Home Office is responsible for approving suitable Lead Sponsors and sponsor groups.

History

The introduction of Community Sponsorship was part of the UK's response to the growing refugee crisis, and follows the Canadian private sponsorship model, which has resettled more than 300,000 refugees in the last 40 years.

2016-2020

In 2014, the UK introduced the Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme (VPRS) to resettle 20,000 Syrians by 2020, and later introduced the Vulnerable Children's Resettlement Scheme (VCRS) to resettle 3000 vulnerable children and their families from the MENA region. In 2015, then Home Secretary, Theresa May, announced that the UK would develop a sponsorship scheme which would count towards these targets. [5]

The UK government worked closely with civil society organisations including Citizens UK on the scheme's design and implementation, and the program was officially launched in July 2016 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, at Lambeth Palace. [6]

In 2017, the Home Office announced funding for an organisation to support the Community Sponsorship movement, which led to the establishment of Reset, an independent charity providing end-to-end training and support to prospective and existing sponsor groups and local authorities. [7] They also work with the Home Office to improve the design and implementation of Community Sponsorship.

2020 to present

In June 2019 the UK government announced that, once its current commitment to resettle refugees via VPRS and VCRS was fulfilled (completion due in 2020), it would launch a new 'UK Resettlement Scheme', merging its Gateway Protection Scheme and other resettlement programs. [8]

Since its launch in 2016, the initiative has worked with over 450 refugees. [9] [10]

A 2020 Migration Policy Institute commentary reported that five of eight countries piloting sponsorship schemes are in Europe. Within Europe, 'The United Kingdom [...] has become a global leader in seeding the development of its model in other countries, including Germany.' [11]

The scheme is championed by the leading UK refugee NGOs, including Reset Communities and Refugees, Citizens UK, Sponsor Refugees (a project of Citizens UK), Refugee Council, Scottish Refugee Council, UNHCR, and internationally by the Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative. [12]

Impact and evaluation

2019 Research into Community Sponsorship by the University of Birmingham [13] reported benefits of the scheme to be:

The same research [13] reported that challenges of the scheme include:

Rossella Pagliuchi-Lor, the representative of UNHCR to the United Kingdom, has described it as transformative for both refugees and volunteers. [14]

Related Research Articles

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees United Nations agency mandated to protect and support refugees

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is a UN agency mandated to aid and protect refugees, forcibly displaced communities, and stateless people, and to assist in their voluntary repatriation, local integration or resettlement to a third country. It is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, with over 17,300 staff working in 135 countries.

Refugee Type of displaced person

A refugee, generally speaking, is a displaced person who has crossed national boundaries and who cannot or is unwilling to return home due to well-founded fear of persecution. Such a person may be called an asylum seeker until granted refugee status by the contracting state or the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) if they formally make a claim for asylum. The lead international agency coordinating refugee protection is the United Nations Office of the UNHCR. The United Nations has a second office for refugees, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which is solely responsible for supporting the large majority of Palestinian refugees.

Freedom from Torture

Freedom from Torture is a British registered charity which provides therapeutic care for survivors of torture who seek protection in the UK. Since it was established in 1985, over 57,000 survivors of torture have been referred to the organisation for help and it is one of the world’s largest torture treatment centres.

Refugee camp Temporary settlement for refugees

A refugee camp is a temporary settlement built to receive refugees and people in refugee-like situations. Refugee camps usually accommodate displaced people who have fled their home country, but camps are also made for internally displaced people. Usually, refugees seek asylum after they have escaped war in their home countries, but some camps also house environmental and economic migrants. Camps with over a hundred thousand people are common, but as of 2012, the average-sized camp housed around 11,400. They are usually built and run by a government, the United Nations, international organizations, or non-governmental organization. Unofficial refugee camps, such as Idomeni in Greece or the Calais jungle in France, are where refugees are largely left without support of governments or international organizations.

Migrant Help is a United Kingdom-based national charity that has been supporting vulnerable migrants since 1963.

Islamic Relief

Islamic Relief is an international aid agency that provides humanitarian relief and development programmes in over 40 countries, serving communities in need regardless of race, political affiliation, gender or belief.

Church World Service (CWS) was founded in 1946 and is a cooperative ministry of 37 Christian denominations and communions, providing sustainable self-help, development, disaster relief, and refugee assistance around the world. The CWS mission is to eradicate hunger and poverty and to promote peace and justice at the national and international level through collaboration with partners abroad and in the US.

The Albert Einstein German Academic Refugee Initiative Fund scholarship programme offers refugee students the possibility to pursue an undergraduate degree in their country of asylum. Through the dedicated support of the German Government, and additional private donors, UNHCR was able to support over 9,300 young refugees since 1992.

International Catholic Migration Commission

The International Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC) is an international organization that serves and protects uprooted people, including migrants, refugees, and internally displaced people, regardless of faith, race, ethnicity or nationality. With staff and programs in over 40 countries, ICMC advocates for sustainable solutions and rights-based policies directly and through a worldwide network of 132 member organizations.

Refugees in New Zealand have two main pathways for resettling in the country. Asylum seekers may seek protection after arrival in New Zealand. Refugees or protected persons may also be resettled from offshore through New Zealand's Refugee Quota Programme. Refugees who have been resettled can apply to sponsor relatives to join them. In 2017/18 a community sponsorship pathway was trialled, extended from 2021.

Refugee Action

Refugee Action is an independent national charity founded in 1981 that provides advice and support to refugees and asylum seekers in the UK and campaigns for a fairer asylum system. It is governed by a board of trustees chaired by Penny Lawrence. Its chief executive is Stephen Hale OBE who joined the charity in February 2014.

Burmese people in the United Kingdom are residents and citizens of the United Kingdom with Burmese ancestry or origins. This can include people born in the UK who are of Burmese descent, as well as those born in Myanmar who have migrated to Britain.

The Gateway Protection Programme was a refugee resettlement scheme operated by the Government of the United Kingdom in partnership with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and co-funded by the European Union (EU), offering a legal route for a quota of UNHCR-identified refugees to be resettled in the UK. Following a proposal by the British Home Secretary, David Blunkett, in October 2001, the legal basis was established by the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 and the programme itself launched in March 2004. The programme enjoyed broad support from the UK's main political parties.

Refugees of the Syrian Civil War are citizens and permanent residents of Syria who have fled the country over the course of the Syrian Civil War. The pre-war population of the Syrian Arab Republic was estimated at 22 million (2017), including permanent residents. Of that number, the United Nations (UN) identified 13.5 million (2016) as displaced persons, requiring humanitarian assistance. Of these, since the start of the Syrian Civil War in 2011 more than six million (2016) were internally displaced, and around five million (2016) had crossed into other countries, seeking asylum or placed in Syrian refugee camps worldwide.

Qatar Charity

Once known as Qatar Charitable Society, Qatar Charity is a humanitarian and development non-governmental organization in the Middle East. It was founded in 1992 in response to the thousands of children who were made orphans by the Afghanistan war and while orphans still remain a priority cause in the organization's work with more than 150,000 sponsored orphans, it has now expanded its fields of action to include six humanitarian fields and seven development fields.

Third country resettlement or refugee resettlement is, according to the UNHCR, one of three durable solutions for refugees who fled their home country. Resettled refugees have the right to reside long-term or permanent in the country of resettlement and may also have the right to become citizens of that country.

Nakivale Refugee Settlement Place in Isingiro, Uganda

Nakivale refugee settlement is a settlement located in Isingiro District near the Tanzania border in Southwest Uganda.

Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program Canadian refugee resettlement program

The Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program (PSR) is a Canadian government initiative that allows for refugees to resettle in Canada with support and funding from private or joint government-private sponsorship. The government also offers semi-private sponsorship through the Blended Visa Office-Referred (BVOR) program, which connects private sponsors with pre-screened and pre-interviewed refugees.

The Syrian Vulnerable Person Resettlement Programme, sometimes referred to as a RelocationScheme, is a programme of the United Kingdom government that plans to resettle 20 000 Syrian refugees from refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq, Egypt and Turkey over the period from September 2015 to May 2020. It was first announced in January 2014 and in September 2015 the expansion to 20,000 refugees was made. It is run in partnership between the UK Home Office, the Department for International Development, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government and NGOs such as Refugee Action. Only 2,659 Syrian refugees were resettled through the programme by the end of June 2016. The National Audit Office estimated the Programme's cost at £1,112 million. Syrians are only granted 5 years humanitarian protection and not indefinite leave to remain.

Partnership for Refugees

The Partnership for Refugees is a refugee public-private partnership established in June 2016 as the Partnership for Refugees by the Obama administration to facilitate President Barack Obama's commitment to creative solutions for the refugee crisis engaging the private sector. The Partnership, an initiative established through collaboration between the State Department and USA for UNHCR with significant support from Accenture Federal Services, was established to facilitate private sector commitments in response to President Obama's June 30, 2016 Call to Action for Private Sector Engagement on the Global Refugee Crisis. On September 20, 2016, at the Leaders Summit on Refugees at the United Nations, President Obama announced that 51 companies from across the American economy have pledged to make new, measurable and significant commitments that will have a durable impact on refugees residing in countries on the frontlines of the global refugee crisis and in countries of resettlement, like the United States.

References

  1. "Formative Evaluation of Community Sponsorship, Institute for Research into Superdiversity pp. 24-27" (PDF). University of Birmingham. July 2019.
  2. 1 2 "Community involvement could transform refugee resettlement program". the Guardian. 2018-09-21. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  3. "Reset UK". www.resetuk.org. Retrieved 2020-06-17.
  4. "UK Government resettlement policy" (PDF). UK Home Office. 2018.
  5. "Home Secretary uses Conservative Party conference speech to warn UK needs to have an immigration limit". EIN.org. EIN. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  6. "Archbishop welcomes refugee community sponsorship scheme". Archbishop of Canterbury. Archbishop Of Canterbury. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  7. "Home Office awards £1 million to help communities support refugees". Government website. UK Government. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  8. "New global resettlement scheme for the most vulnerable refugees announced". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2020-06-17.
  9. "Community Sponsorship". UNHCR. UNHCR. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  10. "'Game-changer': £1m pledged to help refugees resettle in UK". the Guardian. 2020-12-07. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  11. "Made in Europe: The future of refugee resettlement". Migration Policy Institute. Feb 2020.
  12. "Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative". Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative. Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  13. 1 2 "Interim report on Community Sponsorship in the UK" (PDF). University of Birmingham. Nov 2019.
  14. "UN urges UK to restart resettlement of refugees after family drowns in Channel". the Guardian. 2020-10-30. Retrieved 2021-05-18.