Strategic Legal Fund for Vulnerable Young Migrants: Achievements and outcomes in Phase Three

Key findings

Grants

have helped to prevent the introduction of discriminatory law and policy.

Need

for SLF is increasing - the law is a critical tool to protect young people.

Work

has influenced court judgments, contributed to policy change and is feeding further legal casework.

The independent evaluation of the Strategic Legal Fund for Vulnerable Young Migrants (SLF), published in November 2016, shows the value of investing small amounts in enabling NGOs to undertake strategic legal action.

Evaluation shows value of funding strategic legal action.

The SLF provides small grants for pre-litigation research and third party interventions at court which contribute towards upholding and promoting the rights of vulnerable migrant children and young people in the UK.  It was hosted by Trust for London and co-funded by Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, Paul Hamlyn Foundation, Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, Unbound Philanthropy. It was delivered in partnership with MigrationWork CIC.

The evaluation found that:

Vulnerable young migrants have benefited.

SLF grants have helped both to prevent the introduction of discriminatory law and policy (e.g. the Legal Aid residence test); and to mount effective challenges to existing laws and policies causing significant disadvantage to young migrants, such as exclusion from student loans.

SLF-funded work has influenced court judgments, contributed to policy change and is feeding further legal casework.

for example for young migrants refused Jobseeker’s Allowance.

Relatively small injections of funding can have profound and long-lasting effects.

The level of impact cannot be determined by the amount of funding invested, as the value of the SLF is sometimes in enabling critical research and thinking time when it matters.

Almost all projects funded by the SLF have yielded some positive benefits in relation to legal or policy change.

This may be due to tight screening for appropriately strategic projects, including by the Expert Panel of legal and policy advisors.

Incorporating legal challenge (or its threat) into a strategy to tackle the discrimination and disadvantage facing young migrants is proving effective.

even when change through other routes has failed.

The need for the SLF is increasing.

Given the government’s stated aim of making the environment ‘hostile to migrants’, the law is a critical tool to protect young people.

To find out more about the SLF including how to apply for grants, visit www.strategiclegalfund.org.uk.

Download report

Strategic Legal Fund for Vulnerable Young Migrants: Achievements and outcomes in Phase Three

Full report 2.3 MB