Research to shape exhibition on child migration

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Research on child migration by Professor Gordon Lynch will shape a new exhibition at the V&A Museum of Childhood, London in 2015.

The touring exhibition, titled ‘On their own – Britain’s child migrants’ , will draw on Professor Lynch’s research on child migration schemes which sent around 100,000 unaccompanied children from the UK to Canada, Australia and other Commonwealth countries from 1869 until the early 1970s.

Despite a widely held belief that these children’s lives would be improved by migration overseas, the schemes often failed to take account of its emotional impact on children. In some cases children were sent to institutions in which there was widespread abuse and obstacles were put in the way of them maintaining contact with their birth families.

This resulted in formal apologies from the Australian and British Governments in 2009 and 2010 respectively. Many former child migrants and their families are still coming to terms with their experiences.

Professor Lynch’s research focuses on the moral justifications for child migration that led national governments, churches, major charities and members of the Royal Family to give their support to it. His work also examines how these moral convictions, and the political influence of supporters of child migration, led the schemes to continue long after their short-comings had become increasingly recognised.

Professor Lynch, of the University’s School of European Culture and Languages, is the academic curator for the V&A exhibition which will run for nine months from October 2015.

The exhibition, which expects to attract more than 350,000 visitors, will draw together new material that shows why child migration schemes were set up, how they operated, and their effects on children’s lives.

The V&A Museum of Childhood is the final stage of the exhibition tour and will build upon its current home at the Merseyside Maritime Museum .

More information about the exhibition is available here. 

For more information contact Professor Gordon Lynch.

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