Country data · Hague Return Accountability Index

Peru

Peru is a Contracting Party to the 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention (in force since 2001-08-01). This page centralises its verified treaty status, caseload participation, and data gaps.

49 / 100
49.2 / 100 3Tier 3 · Mixed / partial evidence
Confidence: Medium (0.48) Global rank #56 of 103 Hague Network judge U.S. noncompliance
Return-performance index · updated 2026-07-07
How to read this page. This is a data and policy analysis resource — not legal advice and not a legal determination of treaty compliance. Scores are provisional. Countries publish very different amounts of data; missing data lowers confidence, not performance. Resolved is not the same as returned. Where data covers U.S.-related cases only it is labelled proxy. Any budget figures shown are estimated, not official government spending.

Summary & score

Peru is a Contracting Party to the 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention, in force since 2001-08-01 (Accession), with an Article 38 acceptance check required for some country pairs. Its Accountability Index score is driven overwhelmingly by return performance — whether abducted children are actually returned (80% of the score) — with legal framework, judicial engagement and treaty integration as system-quality context.

29
Incoming return applications (2021)
14
Outgoing return applications (2021)
U.S.-related return cases resolved (2024, proxy)
80
Transparency score / 100

Score breakdown

Peru scores 49.2 / 100 on the Hague Return Accountability Index — global rank #56 of 103, Tier 3 · Mixed / partial evidence. Return effectiveness — whether abducted children are actually returned — is 80% of the score; the remaining 20% is system-quality context (legal framework, speed, judicial engagement, cooperation, treaty integration).

Return effectivenessweight 80%
45 / 100
Legal frameworkweight 8%
87 / 100
Speed & enforcementweight 5%
40 / 100
Judicial engagementweight 3%
80 / 100
Cooperationweight 2%
25 / 100
Treaty integrationweight 2%
65 / 100
Show the exact calculation
overall = 0.80·Return effectiveness + 0.08·Legal framework + 0.05·Speed + 0.03·Judicial engagement + 0.02·Cooperation + 0.02·Treaty integration (cap 87) Return effectiveness 45 × 80% Legal framework 87 × 8% Speed & enforcement 40 × 5% Judicial engagement 80 × 3% Cooperation 25 × 2% Treaty integration 65 × 2% = 49.2 / 100 → Tier 3 (Mixed / partial evidence) · confidence 0.48

Return effectiveness: measured return rate 22% of 18 concluded (shrunk to 31% toward the 39% global prior) → 45.

Legal framework: Legal framework (HCCH Country Profile): completed HCCH Country Profile / implementing framework (base 62); concentrated jurisdiction — Juzgados (+25) → 87.

Sources: Status table — 1980 Convention (cid=24) · Prel. Doc. 19A — 2021 statistical study · Annual Report on International Child Abduction 2025 (CY2024) · Sustracción Internacional de Menores de Edad — DGNNA

Full methodology and every country's components: the Accountability Index.

Quick facts

Hague 1980 statusContracting Party · in force 2001-08-01 · Accession
Article 38 checkYes — confirm acceptance for your specific country pair
EU member stateNo
Central authoritySee HCCH directory
Latest data year2021 (HCCH statistical study)
Data scopeGlobal HCCH 2021 flows (this country responded)
Budget transparencyNo public budget line located

Case outcomes

HCCH 2021 application flows (all Convention partners, not U.S.-only):

Incoming returnOutgoing returnIncoming accessOutgoing accessTotal 2021
291418465

Source: HCCH (Prof. Nigel Lowe & Victoria Stephens) — Prel. Doc. No 19A — Statistical study of applications made in 2021 (5th Global Study, updated Sept 2024) E1 · official. These are application counts, not outcomes. HCCH publishes return outcomes only as a global aggregate (39% returned in 2021), so a per-country return rate is not shown.

Speed & enforcement

Processing/enforcement concerns underlying the U.S. noncompliance citation. U.S.-proxy

Global benchmark (2021): the average return application took 207 days against the Article 11 six-week (42-day) aspiration; 24% of cases took over 300 days. Source: HCCH (Prof. Nigel Lowe & Victoria Stephens) — Prel. Doc. No 19A — Statistical study of applications made in 2021 (5th Global Study, updated Sept 2024) E1 · official.

Public cost & cost efficiency

Budget data not publicly available. No official Central-Authority budget line was located for Peru, and there is not yet enough disclosure to build even a Level-B estimate. Cost-per-returned-child is Not published. See the FOIA questions below.

Central authority & legal system

Central Authority details for Peru are not yet in our verified directory. See the HCCH Central Authority directory.

International support

HCCH provides the multilateral framework, statistical studies, and the Malta Process. Per-country funding amounts from the EU, HCCH, UN, or Council of Europe are not published as discrete line items and are recorded as a data gap.

Transparency assessment

Responded to HCCH 2021 statistical surveyYes
Reports incoming & outgoing flowsYes
Reports access casesYes
Dedicated budget lineUnknown — not located
Return-outcome / enforcement disclosureNot published per-country (global aggregate only)
Transparency score80 / 100

responded to the 2021 survey (+40); longitudinal participation 1/3 prior studies (+10); reports both incoming & outgoing flows (+15); reports access cases (+15)

Data quality & limitations

  • Per-country return outcomes are not published; the 39% figure is a global aggregate.
  • No public Central-Authority budget line located.

Confidence: Medium (0.58) — confidence reflects the strength and breadth of evidence, separately from performance. A low confidence means "we cannot yet fully evaluate," not "this country performs badly."

Sources & evidence

SourcePublisherTierSupports
Status table — 1980 Child Abduction Convention (cid=24)Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH)E1 · officialhague_1980_status, entry_into_force_date, accession_or_ratification_type, article_38_acceptance_required
Prel. Doc. No 19A — Statistical study of applications made in 2021 (5th Global Study, updated Sept 2024)HCCH (Prof. Nigel Lowe & Victoria Stephens)E1 · officialcaseload, transparency_survey_participation, global_return_rate, average_resolution_days, outcome_distribution
Central Authorities directory — 1980 Convention (cid=24)HCCHE1 · officialcentral_authority
Annual Report on International Child Abduction 2025 (reporting on calendar year 2024)U.S. Department of State, Office of Children's IssuesE2 · proxycooperation, speed_proxy, us_related_case_counts
1980 Hague Convention, Article 11 (six-week decision aspiration)HCCHE1 · officialspeed_benchmark

FOIA / public-records questions

Tailored requests that would raise Peru's confidence score and unlock the return-outcome and cost categories:

  1. Which body is Peru's designated Central Authority and what is its annual Convention budget and FTE count?
  2. How many children were physically returned under the Convention in each of the last five years?
  3. What is the average time from application to first-instance decision and to enforcement?
  4. What national Hague statistics does the government publish?

Use the data

Machine-readable data for every country: countries.json · rankings.json · rankings.csv · sources.json. Last updated 2026-07-06. Cite as: “SafeReturn Alliance, Hague Return Accountability Index (provisional), 2026-07-06.”

This page is a data and policy analysis resource, not legal advice and not a legal determination of treaty compliance. Scores are provisional and analytical. Some data reflects cases involving the United States only and may not represent the country's full global Hague caseload. Budget figures, where shown, may be estimated and are labelled; none are shown as official government spending unless an official source supports them.