“…3 Much scholarly work on independent child migrants engages in the analysis of the actors' (inter)national human rights as well as in the documentation of the numerous infringements of these rights through state and non-state actors (see Vacchiano & Jiménez, 2014; on Central American/Guatemalan independent child migrants' rights violations see Bhabha, 2008Bhabha, , 2014Escobar Sarti, 2008;Girón Solórzano, 2014 Influenced by a paradigm shift in childhood studies repositioning children and youth as "active agents in the construction of their own lives," independent child migration too is frequently analyzed in terms of agency and vulnerability (Bordonaro, 2014, p. 413;Eßer, 2014;Ensor & Goździak, 2010;Mizen & Ofosu-Kusi, 2013;Oswell, 2013;O'Higgins, 2012;Vacchiano & Jiménez, 2014). Against this background, a vast body of interdisciplinary literature has not only provided "evidence" of young migrants' agency but also of how this agency is constrained by state child protection policies and through state-driven discourses on child migrants' vulnerability (see Bhabha, 2008Bhabha, , 2014Ensor & Goździak, 2010;O' Connell Davidson & Farrow, 2007;Orgocka, 2012;Uehling, 2008;Vacchiano & Jiménez, 2014). Nevertheless, Aida Orgocka (2012, p. 8) indicates that more qualitative research is needed "into how policy practices in countries in the Global South impact the agentic actions" of independent child migrants.…”