This chapter examines whether Norway's law, policies and practice in the field of asylum are in compliance with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). It begins with a discussion of Norway's asylum legislation and interpretation of child-sensitive legislation. This is followed by analysis of migration-and-refugee policies and regulations and the implications of new regulations in the Immigration Act after increase in the migration flow in 2015-2016. Two contested regulations and their implications are especially analysed given increasingly frequent refusal decisions, and the forced return of young asylum seekers and families, usually following a stay at a holding or detention centre. The author finds worrying tendencies with the reversal of various children's rights in the area of immigration. The analysis of the current state of children's rights in the area of asylum has shown that the CRC is still far from being fully implemented in Norway.KEYWORDS asylum | children's rights | child-specific forms of persecution | immigration law | unaccompanied minors