Skip to main content
Nasc Migrant and Refugee Rights
  • Who we are
    • About us
    • Our history
    • Our Team
    • Governance
    • Vacancies
  • What we do
    • Advocacy Service
    • Campaigns
    • Current Projects
    • Our Achievements
    • Stories
  • Get help
    • Advocacy Service
    • Know your Rights
  • Resources
    • Know your Rights
    • Publications
    • Submissions
    • Media Centre
  • Support us
    • Donate
    • Take Action
  • News
  • Contact

What we do / Campaigns

Back to Campaigns

Family Reunification

Share
Man sitting on public bench in a park

“The family unit has a better chance of successfully… integrating in a new country rather than individual refugees”

UNHCR, Family Protection Issues, 1999

Nasc believes family reunification is a key element in the successful integration of migrants and refugees. Refugee family reunification – governed in legislation by the International Protection Act, 2015, and non-refugee family reunification – facilitated through Guidelines for non-EEA nationals – form a core part of our legal service provision, and are therefore priority areas of our campaigning work. 

Information on how to apply for family reunification is contained on our Know Your Rights Page here (for refugee families) and here (for non-refugee families).  

Key Campaigns: 

Return family reunification rights to beneficiaries of international protection (refugee and subsidiary protection)

“[Family separation] is a break, it is a wound that I don’t have any words to describe. It is terrible, you feel it. And when you put the family together you can’t find a word to describe the happiness because it is the way it just has to be, it is a complete.

The International Protection Act 2015 introduced significant new restrictions on the right to family reunification for refugees and persons eligible for subsidiary protection. This has had a devastating impact on the refugees we work with. It means that adult refugees can no longer apply to be joined by any extended family members including their parents, children aged over 18, non-biological children who form part of the household but have not been formally adopted. It also introduced a time limit on applications. Refugees now lose the right to apply for family reunification 12 months after they are granted status. For those who are separated by war or conflict or who have family members imprisoned unjustly, it can take years to track down their family. 

You can download our joint report with Oxfam and the Irish Refugee Council A Family Belongs Together here. The report highlights the importance of family reunification to refugee families. 

In the last Oireachtas, Nasc worked closely with Senator Colette Kelleher and the Civil Engagement Group, Deputy Fiona O’Loughlin and NGO partners the Irish Refugee Council and Oxfam Ireland to introduce a Private Members Bill amending the family reunification provisions in the 2015 Act and restoring family reunification rights. The Bill received widespread support and the Oireachtas Committee on Justice and Equality recommended that the Bill be passed however the government refused to pass a 'money message' and the Bill lapsed with the dissolution of the Dail and Seanad in January 2020. 

We are now calling on a new government to enact legislation which would restore the family reunification rights removed by the International Protection Act 2015. We want to ensure that same-sex couples have the right to family reunification, extended family members including parents or young adult children are included and we want the 12 month time limit removed. 

Please take action to restore family reunification rights by writing to your local TD.  


Legislate for non-refugee family reunification

At present Irish citizens and migrant workers do not have a legislative right to family reunification with immediate family members.  A framework facilitating family reunification for all legal residents of Ireland is desperately needed.  Irish legislation in relation to family reunification should be brought into line with the provisions of the EU Directive on the Right to Family Reunification. Ireland has opted out of this Directive, causing us to fall behind best practice in the EU.

Back to Campaigns
Related content
Know your rights
Family Reunification (Refugee and Subsidiary Protection)
Know your rights
Family Reunification (Non-Refugee)

Related news

'Reunited refugees at risk of being homeless'

July 28, 2020
Read more

Launch of research report ‘Invisible People: The Integration Support Needs of Refugee Families Reunified in Ireland’.

July 28, 2020
Read more

Good News Friday!

October 4, 2019
Read more

Family Reunification - Securing Integration for Refugees

September 10, 2019
Read more

Get involved. Sign up for emails.

Subscribe

Follow us

Get help

Main navigation

  • Who we are
    • About us
    • Our history
    • Our Team
    • Governance
    • Vacancies
  • What we do
    • Advocacy Service
    • Campaigns
    • Current Projects
    • Our Achievements
    • Stories
  • Get help
    • Advocacy Service
    • Know your Rights
  • Resources
    • Know your Rights
    • Publications
    • Submissions
    • Media Centre
  • Support us
    • Donate
    • Take Action
  • News
  • Contact

34 Paul Street, 1st Floor
Cork City, T12 W14H
Get directions
Phone: (021) 427 3594
Mail: [email protected]

Charities Regulator No. 20043612                

Registered Charity No. CHY13752

Registered Company No. 335227

Cookie Policy | GDPR policy | Governance page

Donate