Country Profiles Child Marriage 2022
Country Profiles Child Marriage 2022
Country Profiles Child Marriage 2022
PROFILES
XXX 2022
© UNICEF/Xxx
UNFPA-UNICEF Global Programme to End Child Marriage
COUNTRY PROFILES 2022
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 3
The Global Programme to End Child Marriage is generously funded by the Governments
of Belgium, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland; the European Union through the Spotlight Initiative; and Zonta International.
© United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
July 2023
BANGLADESH
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UN0835155/Himu
BANGLADESH 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES bangladesh UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 6
More than
15 MILLION
© UNICEF/UNI406810/Mawa
8,295
people were reached through 3,800
imams and female teachers, trained
by the programme, at madrasas, a adolescent girls
with key messages on ending child were given educational support, and
marriage and violence against also bicycles to support their
children. transportation to and from school.
More than
25,393 vulnerable
adolescent girls, including girls who are
480
addressing key adolescent issues, and
the ‘I make my rules’ digital campaign.
child journalists from
24 districts who have been trained by
3,015
the programme produced over 150
news reports and published 30 new
boys and men videos on ending child marriage, girls’
participated in intergenerational and empowerment, gender inequality and
peer-to-peer dialoguesto promote other issues related to gender
positive masculinities. discrimination.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES bangladesh UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 7
The child marriage country context significant jump in the adolescent pregnancy rate
in non-slum urban settings, from 13 per cent to 20
Bangladesh has been making gradual progress per cent, the same level as that in slum areas.
in achieving the SDGs, however, poverty, social
inequality and discrimination against women and girls Although the COVID-19 pandemic profoundly
is still a major challenge. UNICEF estimates that affected the everyday lives of girls for two years
there are 38 million child brides in Bangladesh, in Bangladesh, there is no statistical evidence
13.4 million of whom were married before the age that the rate of child marriage substantially
of 15. In Bangladesh, child brides have traditionally increased during the pandemic, based on a
been more likely to live in poorer, rural households survey supported by the Global Programme.
and less likely to have had more than a secondary
education. However, a health survey has revealed
an upward trend in the number of child marriages Overall programme performance
in non-slum urban settings, from 25 per cent
to 28 per cent in the last 8 years. This has led to a TABLE 1: Summary of output indicator performance (2022)
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
149,503 83,412
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
4,200 2,008
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
35,000 97,722
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 256,151 268,675
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 5,680,000 1,595,470
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
6,000 5,920
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
3 10
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
6 2
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
6 3
(cumulative)
Bangladesh is home to
13.4 over 34 million child brides;
1 in 2 young women were
MILLION married in childhood.
married
before
age 15
34.5 MILLION
married
before age 18
Development and the Directorate of Secondary To ensure the sustainability of economic empowerment
and Higher Education, developed a ‘career pathway’ (livelihood skills and income-generation),
booklet for adolescent girls in 2022, helping girls adolescent girls need the support from a network
to identify how they can reach their career goals. of Government and non-government services.
The booklet provides information on traditional The programme will continue to create better income-
and non-traditional professions for girls, a checklist generating opportunities for them by strengthening
and a list of institutes that provide education the capacities of civil society organizations (CSOs),
and training, as well as useful services. The booklet service providers and the private sector.
was trialled with married and unmarried adolescent
girls at community level before publication. In 2023, the alternative learning pathway programme
has been evolving into three different interventions
for the most marginalized and vulnerable adolescent
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps girls and young women – informal apprenticeship,
entrepreneurship and centre-based skills-training.
The majority of married adolescent girls in the Global Documentation of this process will be another
Programme are from the most disadvantaged families key focus for 2023, to inform its scaling-up.
in the country, living in tea gardens and urban slums,
facing high levels of poverty and exclusion. In 2022,
adolescent girls from urban slum areas registered Enhancing the family
low levels of attendance in the alternative learning and community environment
pathway programme, partly because of multiple
deprivations; their families are constantly evicted
without notice and, at times, forced to leave A recent baseline study, on knowledge, attitudes,
their homes due to flooding and fire breaks. practices and norms related to harmful practices
in Bangladesh, highlighted that 50 per cent
In communities in Bangladesh, the programme of community members know about the need
has created a platform to better coordinate people to abandon harmful practices. However, fewer than
working for women’s rights, feminist and youth-led 30 per cent of adolescents could mention three
organizations and subnational Government structures. benefits of abandoning harmful ways of disciplining
© UNICEF/UN0751764/Spiridonova
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES bangladesh UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 10
children. UNFPA and UNICEF continued to focus The respondents said that, following the dialogues,
on expanding knowledge and changing attitudes they had changed the decision-making process in their
through group counselling on positive gender families to ensure that female relatives were involved
norms. They are also promoting positive parenting in decision-making and that their opinions were heard.
practices through fathers’ groups, and through
helping community and religious leaders to engage
with male caregivers to change their attitudes and to
act in their community to prevent child marriage.
In 2022, 768,654 people in targeted communities
“ When I come home from working as a
day labourer, my wife does everything
for me: from bringing fresh clothes
participated in various forms of dialogue sessions. for a bath, to serve food. I never
thought about how much work I have
The programme organized more than 10 dialogues to do in the household, I never used
between married adolescent girls and their partners, to think about what else could be done
including their parents and in-laws, to discuss issues in the house like cooking, eating
related to their aspirations, the division of household and sleeping. My wife is pregnant,
labour, control over women, family planning methods and she does a lot of work at home,
and services, sexual and reproductive health, so now I share the housework [with her].”
and gender-based violence (GBV). In addition, more
than 15 group dialogues were organized between — Sahin, 21, married to an adolescent girl
in Potuakhali, Bangladesh and participant
unmarried adolescent girls and boys and their parents in a couples’ workshop
to discuss the young peoples’ aspirations and how
their families can help them reach those aspirations.
by UNICEF and its Government counterparts moving Gaibandha, Sirajganj, Jamalpur, Sherpur, Khagrachari,
from a project-based approach to one of scaling Rangamati and Moulvibazar) and 840 adolescents
up interventions. Nevertheless, this approach has led were reached with sexual and reproductive health
to a greater use of community structures, with leaders and rights services in 12 secondary schools run by
and community groups becoming more involved Dhaka North City Corporation. The programme also
in supporting girls’ rights. In 2022, more Chairs of rural supported the development of an ‘adolescent website’,
councils (‘Union Parishads’) and their members which gives sexual and reproductive health and rights
committed to ensuring that girls are safe and free education, and which has had 10.4 million visitors.
from sexual harassment in their communities.
A total of 121 secondary schools in Jamalpur,
This change has come about through the programme Bogura and Patuakhali districts were helped to keep
and its Government partners successfully adopting running their anti-sexual harassment committees,
interventions that include a public demonstration as per Bangladesh High Court Guidelines.
of positive attitudes, such as the intergroup The committee members were trained on the
and intergenerational dialogues. It has also guidelines and how to implement interventions
led to the increasing effectiveness of UNICEF at their schools. Each committee has at least five
Government counterparts in promoting positive members, with female Chairs where possible and they
child-caring practices by adolescents’ parents meet, on average, once a quarter. During these
and caregivers. Contextualized guidelines meetings, the members discuss issues such as:
for adolescent participation in the dialogues
have been developed and rolled out, in addition • informing students about
to monitoring mechanisms being adapted to improve harassment complaint boxes
social and behavioural change programming.
• any complaints received
• roles and responsibilities of the
Strengthening systems committee members
• their next course of action.
Through the Global Programme,
support was provided for:
Gender promoters and technical officers from
• establishing 22 adolescent- the State gave the meetings logistical support
friendly health centres and conveyed messages from the Global Programme
on monitoring mechanisms and documentation.
• building the capacity of comprehensive,
adolescent-friendly, health services
(including those related to gender-
based violence and mental health) Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
• facilitating reporting using
the information management systems Although the Government, together with the Global
DHIS2 and the Directorate General Programme, has prioritized the establishment
for Family Planning information system of anti-sexual harassment committees in schools,
access to adolescent sexual and reproductive
• organizing quarterly meetings to reviews
progress on adolescent health health and rights information is still a challenge
in Bangladesh. Government agencies, especially
• conducting facility-based
the National Curriculum and Textbook Board, do not
‘adolescent health days’.
think it is appropriate to integrate CSE in the revised
curriculum, due to Bangladeshi culture, as they think
Overall, in 2022, 143,579 boys and girls (93,614 girls) that some of the content and terminology is not
received services from adolescent-friendly health suitable for the students. Parents, schoolteachers,
service centres in 12 districts supported by the Global local community leaders, peers and key gatekeepers
Programme. Nearly 11,000 adolescents accessed are therefore hesitant to undertake discussions
contraception and 87,019 received counselling on sexual and reproductive health issues. Most
and treatment for reproductive tract infections of the anti-sexual harassment committees were
or sexually transmitted infections. Further, around formed, or became operational, in 2019 with
2,275 adolescents were reached in 65 secondary training on case management, referral systems
schools in 12 districts (Bhola, Patuakhali, Barguna, and committee management. However, COVID-19
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES bangladesh UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 12
and UNICEF on how to better identify and support perpetuate gender stereotypes. For example, several
opportunities to advance gender-transformative programmes appear to be focused on girls, such
approaches within the Global Programme. as offering training for working in beauty parlours
and tailoring, while programmes for boys relate
FIGURE 3: Assessment of interventions of partner to training in cellular phone servicing. The assessment
organizations in Bangladesh, on the gender equality recommended systematically incorporating
continuum partner CSOs in the roll out of the programme’s
Gender-Transformative Accelerator tool, as well
as strengthening their capacities to implement
CSOs implementing
gender transformative gender-transformative programming.
interventions,, 4%
interventions
© UNICEF/UN0853139/Magray
governments to allocate public financial resources abuse and exploitation of children and child
for the implementation of national policies and marriage. Sectoral and multisectoral training
programmes at decentralized levels, including on the Act and draft rules have been rolled out in
the funding of good quality education, health and 23 districts with the participation of 1,423 child
protection services for adolescent girls. Since affairs police officers, juvenile court judges,
the inception of the programme, the number of probation officers, social services officers and legal
countries implementing a costed national plan or aid officers at district and Upazila level.
strategy to end child marriage has increased from
7 in 2018 to 33 in 2022. Some 15 of these countries The Global Programme has engaged
have also allocated public financial resources for the the Bangladesh Parliament Secretariat (BAPPD)
implementation of these action plans. There are 11 to promote awareness in schools on the dangers
Global Programme focus countries with costed action of child marriage and other issues relevant
plans (excluding Yemen) and of these, 8 have allocated to youth and adolescents. BAPPD also organized
public financial resources for their implementation. a meeting between the Standing Committee
of the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs
The Global Programme is supporting Bangladesh and key stakeholders to review measures taken
to develop a costed national action plan with a to prevent sexual violence and child marriage
monitoring and evaluation framework. The Global as per High Court directives during the year.
Programme is further supporting the cascaded
roll out of the Model District Initiative (from the
Ministry of Women and Children Affairs) in six The public policy maturity model
districts to serve as a way of implementing the:
Elimination of harmful practices such as child
• Child Marriage Restraint Act (CMRA) 2017 marriage requires the integration of strategic
approaches, processes, systems and information.
• Child Marriage Restraint Rules 2018
UNFPA and UNICEF recognize the role national
• National action plan to end child action plans play in strengthening policy coherence
marriage and other related legal to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization
and administrative instruments. for Economic Cooperation and Development peer
review process emphasize that the plans need:
The Model District Initiative will be replicated in other
districts of the country to meet the SDG targets. • political commitment and policy statements
• policy coordination mechanisms
Policies and legislation • systems for monitoring,
analysis and reporting.
The Global Programme and its partners
are leading policy advocacy efforts to close UNICEF has developed and tested a policy maturity
administrative loopholes in the Children Act 2013 model and tools for assessing public policies
that are enabling the perpetuation of the sexual to end harmful practices and achieve SDG 5.3
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES bangladesh UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 15
The maturity model provides a framework The model is structured around six intermediate
for key national stakeholders to review and assess outcomes and different subdomains that
national policy approaches and systems for are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e.,
weak-building; average-enhancing; good-
• eliminating and preventing female genital integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4).
mutilation (FGM) and child marriage
TABLE 2: Snippet of the policy maturity model
Engagement and participation C2: Civil Society Engagement, including women and children
Governance and
Coordination
3,0
1,0
0,0 © UNICEF/UN0751763/Spiridonova
Generating and applying data healthier children, develop life-skills and earn higher
and evidence incomes. They can help lift themselves and their
present and future families out of poverty. Not only
will investing in, and empowering, girls ensure that
In 2022, the Global Programme in Bangladesh they fully enjoy their childhood free from the risk
conducted two studies; the ‘Situation of marriage, but it also ensures that they can maximize
of child marriage during COVID-19: A rapid study’ their capabilities and options, helping the country
and ‘Menstrual health management in urban slums’. to achieve its economic and development goals.
The findings of these studies show the different
needs of adolescent girls in the social contexts In 2022, UNICEF developed and published a statistical
in which they live. The findings and the resulting profile of child marriage in Bangladesh. This details
recommendations further highlight the importance how common the practice is, the characteristics
of continued investment in data, especially of these marriages, and provides insights into
in mechanisms that would enable data-gathering the lives of child brides across key domains
during public health emergencies such as COVID-19. of well-being. The profile also shows trends
They also show the need for their use in informing in the practice and whether the country is on track
effective, relevant interventions. These studies to reach the 2030 SDG target. The country profile
also highlight the urgent need to invest resources is aimed at supporting decisions by governments
in adolescent girls. Educated and healthy girls stay and civil society in terms of targeting interventions,
in school longer, marry later, delay childbearing, have and enabling progress to be monitored.
© UNICEF/UN0821457/Map
BURKINA FASO
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UN0640711/Dejongh
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022, the United
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, Nations General Assembly Third Committee resolution
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by Zambia
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout and Canada, was adopted by consensus. A total
and inequality, triggering increases in child of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES burkina faso UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 20
1,095
268,875
villages publicly
declared the abandonment of harmful
people practices such as child marriage,
engaged in dialogue sessions on the FGM and violence against children.
consequences of, and alternatives to,
child marriage, the rights of
1,095
adolescent girls and gender equality.
community-based
83,412
child protection units were established,
and 8,031 influential community
adolescent
members were enabled to support
girls were trained in life-skills or com-
community surveillance mechanisms in
prehensive sexuality education (CSE).
their villages to prevent child marriage.
2,008 vulnerable
adolescent girls were provided with 5,920 traditional, religious
support to continue their education, and community leaders were mobilized
including receiving bicycles to help to act in dialogues and consensus-
them travel to and from school. building platforms to end child marriage.
1.5 MILLION
village committees
in six regions were reached with social
communication activities on gender
norms, the causes of child marriage people were reached with messaging
and its consequences on the lives of addressing child marriage through
adolescents. the campaign ‘Don’t call me madam’.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES burkina faso UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 21
Child marriage country context represent almost a quarter of the country’s educational
institutions, with more than 500,000 girls affected.
Child marriage is common in Burkina Faso, with 52 per The security and humanitarian crises have also led to
cent married before the age of 18. UNICEF estimates the closure or only partial functioning of 606 health
that there are more than three million child brides facilities in eight regions. These represent 42 per
in Burkina Faso, and of these, more than 500,000 cent of the nation’s health facilities, depriving nearly
married before age 15. Child marriage persists here two million people of access to health care. The closure
largely due to traditional and familial practices of some courts, police and gendarmerie stations
and beliefs. The COVID-19 pandemic profoundly affected and the widespread presence of internally displaced
the everyday lives of girls in Burkina Faso, and the rights people has also exacerbated the number of child
of children were also severely affected by the security marriages in the eight most crisis-affected regions.
and humanitarian crises in the north, centre-north, east,
Boucle du Mouhoun, Sahel and centre-east regions.
Overall programme performance
Overall, in 2022, the insecurity has led to the closure
of 6,253 primary and post-primary schools. These TABLE 1: Summary of output indicator performance (2022)
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
149,503 83,412
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
4,200 2,008
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
35,000 97,722
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 256,151 268,675
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 5,680,000 1,595,470
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
6,000 5,920
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
3 10
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
50 1,004
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 63 110
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 10 10
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 5 4
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
45 45
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
6 2
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
6 3
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
1 1
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES burkina faso UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 22
3.2 MILLION
married
before age 18
© UNICEF/UNI422710/Seck
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES burkina faso UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 24
people and an estimated 10 million television viewers. of the members of the newly established CCPEs
The strengthening of strategic alliances with traditional are women or young people. The fact that community
and social media networks helped the programme members are monitoring harmful practices within
also reach 1.6 million people, including 656,699 girls communities affected by insecurity has enabled
and women, with key messages on ending child the implementation of measures to mitigate the risks
marriage, adolescent girls’ rights and gender equality. of child marriage and FGM. Overall, community-
driven interventions enabled the identification
and protection of more than 210,351 girls at risk of,
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps or survivors of, child marriage or FGM, including
122,968 adolescent girls who received prevention
The effects of the insecurity and COVID-19 and care services related to child marriage.
has continued to push men and boys away from local
communities, especially rural ones, in search of better UNICEF supported the Ministry of National Education,
living conditions. This has affected the programme’s Literacy, and the Promotion of National Languages
strategy of dialogues with boys and men on promoting to implement the ‘Child-Friendly Quality School’
positive masculinities. At national level, political initiative (EQAME), particularly at primary school level,
instability has resulted in shifting Government priorities, to ensure the retention of girls in education. Some
directly affecting the mobilization of domestic resources 1,004 schools with the EQAME label provide a good
to support programmes and coordination activities. quality education that considers gender and meets
minimum standards in the areas targeted by the
However, the use of community members programme. The EQAME training guide includes
to implement activities within villages has facilitated specific modules on parental education and child
access to the most at-risk children. Indeed, their protection and gender and gender-sensitive pedagogy.
involvement enabled the programme to be deployed The initiative has also established a systematic referral
in areas difficult to access – including those mechanism between child protection and education
under the control of armed groups, despite practitioners to manage social issues that may hinder
these groups’ direct threats to the activities. education for young girls, such as child marriage.
© UNICEF/UN0847041/Dejongh
Building partnerships
CSOs implementing
gender responsive
interventions,, 44%
interventions
changed priorities, and also because of social issues The model is structured around six intermediate
related to the proposed changes. In 2022, the advocacy outcomes and different subdomains that
of UNICEF and UNFPA, in partnership with CSOs, led to are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e.,
the resumption of discussions on the code, and its weak-building; average-enhancing; good-
finalization during a national workshop. The proposed integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4).
reform addresses the social determinants of child,
and forced, marriage. It harmonizes the age of marriage TABLE 2: Snippet of the policy maturity model
of 18 years for both boys and girls. A judge’s
ability to make exemptions on age is maintained Intermediate
Sub-Domains Score
but cannot be less than 17 years for both boys Outcome
and girls. The code also recognizes customary
A1: Political Commitment
and religious marriages and recommends their
transcription in the civil registers, plus the inclusion Governance
of the place of celebration of the marriage or the and Coordi- A2: Coordination structures
nation
place of residence of the spouses. This transcription
enables oversight on the age of the spouses, their A3: National Action Plans
consent and the ability to report any offenders.
Policy and B.1: Legislation, policies
Legislation and implementation mechanisms
action plans play in strengthening policy coherence D1: Financing of harmful practices
to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization services
for Economic Cooperation and Development peer
D2: National budget establishment —-
review process emphasize that the plans need:
3,0
The workshop focused on identifying opportunities The programme supported the development of a
for shared action among the coalition members. policy brief on child marriage to guide the UNICEF
The GTA process is meant to incorporate gender- country office in understanding trends and drivers
transformative elements into existing workplans, for child marriage, and options to accelerate
so key stakeholders were asked to identify and scale up efforts to end the practice in different
crucial areas within their activities where gender- contexts. The brief also provides a way of analysing
transformative approaches can have an immediate, the country situation and identifying high-impact
and potentially amplified, impact. Participants investment areas to end child marriage. The brief
underlined the need to consider the specific will be further used to facilitate a platform for south-
context of Burkina Faso which is marked by: south knowledge exchange on issues related to child
marriage in West, central, eastern and southern Africa.
• political transition
• security and humanitarian crises
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
• COVID-19 and its lingering
effects on the economy There are few evaluations of child marriage
• a looming food crisis due to low rainfall. interventions in Burkina Faso – and fewer still
have costed the interventions and the costs
per beneficiaries. UNFPA and UNICEF in Burkina Faso
The National Strategy to End Child Marriage is also are producing detailed annual updates of programme
under review and will be updated in 2023. achievements in the form of the annual reports
and country profiles. These documents present
Through participatory discussion, the workshop the quantitative outputs and targets reached during
participants decided to focus on: 2022, as well as challenges and lessons based
on programme implementation. However, these reports
• girls’ skills, agency and empowerment include very little monitoring of outcomes or evaluation
of findings. Possible reasons for this include:
• addressing masculinities
and engaging men and boys
• gathering and analysing outcome and impact
• community mobilization to create level data is expensive and requires
an enabling environment a relatively high level of technical expertise
• systems-strengthening. • the Global Programme has prioritized
output monitoring, statistical analysis
of Demographic and Health Survey
Participants prioritized three types of actions to take: (DHS) and multiple indicator cluster data,
baseline studies and qualitative research
on child marriage patterns and drivers
• scale up safe spaces
and adolescent girls’ clubs • the Global Programme has not yet invested
adequate resources in measuring
• policy advocacy and parliamentary outcome-level results.
engagement and systems-strengthening work
• social mobilization of communities, This limits the amount and depth of the programme’s
and the facilitation of more dialogue.
learning and its contributions to the country’s evidence
base related to child marriage programming.
ETHIOPIA
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UNI398530/Pouget
“ Iand
attended the forum and learned a lot about the dangers of child marriage
other harmful practices. I was unhappy with the marriage, but I had no real
understanding of what the negative consequences were and what could be done
to get myself out of the situation. My father was not happy as well. He married
me off because the community elders insisted, so it was easier to convince
him against the marriage using the information I gained at the forum. After
I told my father what I had learned, he was extremely supportive. We reported
the case to the Office of Women expert who supported us throughout
the marriage cancellation process and encouraged me to re-enrol in school.”
— Mafuza Jemal, 17, Grade 8 student, Haramaya, Oromia region
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ethiopia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 32
ethiopia 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ethiopia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 33
145,415 adolescent
girls (120,356 unmarried and 25,059
participated in group dialogue
sessions on the consequences of, and
alternatives to, child marriage, the
married) and 13,382 adolescent boys rights of adolescent girls and gender
benefited from life-skills training, sexual equality to change social norms.
and reproductive health information
and comprehensive sexuality education More than
2 MILLION
(CSE). Among the adolescent girls
empowered, 409 have a disability.
1,300
conflict and drought in some areas.
More than 3,000 girls received
dignity kits, containing menstrual women’s
hygiene supplies, which contribute development groups and youth
to improving girls’ school attendance. groups were supported to conduct
community surveillance to identify
child marriage arrangements,
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
108,926 145,415
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
44,200 33,674
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
36,788 72,435
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 740,090 613,989
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 3,063,000 2,180,428
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
1,986 10,557
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
41 31
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
247 304
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 730 797
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 4 4
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 2 2
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
8 11
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
8 6
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
8 6
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
3 5
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ethiopia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 35
Net Programme (PSNP). The capacity of organizations A randomized baseline survey, backed by the Global
such as community care coalitions and gender Programme, of girls aged 10–14 years revealed
clubs have also been strengthened, through that 53 per cent knew about the consequences
training, to mobilize community resources of child marriage, with no differences between
to support girls at risk of dropping out of school. the intervention and control areas. Some 78 per cent
of the girls agreed that girls should have the same
The Global Programme, in collaboration with opportunities in the community as boys, and with
its implementing partners, has institutionalized the idea that women should participate equally with
life-skills education through a training of trainers their husbands in making household decisions. Fewer
scheme in teachers’ colleges. In 2022, 347 gender than half (45 per cent) were a little supportive of the
club representatives and school principals use of intimate partner violence with no differences
from 304 schools completed a certified master between intervention and control areas.
trainer’s course in comprehensive life-skills that
integrated knowledge on ending child marriage Using the multisectoral alternative learning programme
and FGM. In addition, a core team was established known as ‘Bete’ (my home), UNICEF and its partners
in teacher training colleges to undertake technical provided out-of-school adolescent girls and boys,
and monitoring activities in schools so that the life- especially those from low-income families, with
skills education meets the set standards and to ensure education materials in safe spaces, so that they could
facilitators are provided with on-the-spot technical learn numeracy and literacy skills to enhance their
guidance and support. Safe spaces were established performance in school. Overall, 33,674 girls received
for out-of-school adolescent girls in the community, support to enrol and stay in school. In addition,
based on age cohorts (10–14 years and 15–19 years). more than 3,000 girls received dignity kits which
Overall, the programme reached 145,415 adolescent contribute to improving girls’ school attendance.
girls with comprehensive life-skills education which
included 57,668 out-of-school girls and 87,747 girls
from the 304 schools in the 29 woredas targeted Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
by the programme. In order to build a movement
of change-agents to end child marriage and gender The conflict has delayed implementation of the
inequality, the programme also targeted 13,382 programme in many of the target areas, particularly
adolescent boys within these communities with life- in the Tigray, Afar and Amhara regions. Due to
skills education and awareness-training on positive insecurity, it was impossible to teach adolescent
masculinities, power dynamics and gender equality. girls life-skills in some districts in Amhara and Afar. 2
2 Kobo, Debark Zuria, Argoba, Dehana, Artumafursi, Jilitumega, Wogidi, and Merhabtie districts in Amhara region and Dalol, Megale, Kone-
ba, Erebti and Berhale in Afar.
18.6 MILLION
married
before age 18
Families displaced in some woredas have lost their During the development process, the programme
household incomes and have been unable to meet continued adapting life-skills education to reach
the basic needs of their school-going children. schoolgirls. Issues related to the different situations
This has resulted in families and children requiring of OOSGs require an innovative and motivational
comprehensive support (including meeting their approach for them to complete the training as they
economic needs) beyond the Global Programme, are often busy with household chores and some
through collaboration with other partners. of them are also engaged in various income-
UNICEF stopped the provision of direct economic generating activities. The roll out of the new manual
support to school-going girls in the middle of the will involve the Village Savings and Loan Associations
implementation period, leading to the programme in some groups for testing and it might be considered
facilitators designing a new way of leveraging support for scaling-up, based on the test results.
for them from the stakeholders of the Ethiopian PSNP.
One of the lessons learned from the year is that
Though the support, both material and financial, the school’s administrations and the community,
was limited, the girls used it as an opportunity via the parent-teacher association members,
to continue their education which shows are important in enrolling and retaining
its importance for them. Strengthening community adolescent girls in primary school. In 2023, there
structures, such as community care coalitions is a need for school administrations to continue
and gender clubs, is critical to further improving collaborating with the committees established
their ability to mobilize more resources and continue to combat harmful traditional practices
supporting girls and boys at risk of dropping and community surveillance mechanisms.
out of school due to economic challenges.
Gender club members and school management provide
The development of the out-of-school girls’ crucial support for adolescent girls and boys at risk
(OOSGs) comprehensive empowerment manual of dropping out of school. They have been instrumental
was delayed, because the onset of COVID-19 in identifying vulnerable individuals and giving them
hampered the formative assessment needed to guide the self-confidence, through school-based psychosocial
the design in 2021. The layers of consultation needed support, that has resulted in the adolescents continuing
with key actors to get clearance on the content, their education. Life-skills education has also
especially that related to sexual and reproductive contributed a lot to improving school attendance:
health and sexuality also contributed to the delay. absenteeism among trained adolescents is almost none.
© UNICEF/UN0855824/Assefa
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ethiopia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 37
© UNICEF/UN0627365/
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps In 2023, the programme will prioritize
several interventions.
Implementing the programme has been interrupted
in some districts, due to the conflict in northern • It will implement the newly developed
Ethiopia, and the spillover of the war into school-related gender-based violence
the Amhara and Afar regions. This has particularly (SRGBV) community conversations at school
affected the capacity-building of schools level. The regional education bureau
and the provision of good quality, gender- is waiting for the Ministry of Education
to endorse this so that it can be adapted
responsive education for adolescent girls, including
and implemented across the regions.
CSE related to child marriage. It is difficult to get This will familiarize all teachers, students
data on this from woredas in some instances, as most and parents with procedures for reporting
of data-collection points and systems in these abuse and harassment at school.
areas have been affected by the conflict.
• It will conduct capacity-building
on technical competence on SRGBV
The education sector does not have enough funding to demonstrate gender-responsive
to cover all Global Programme target regions classroom practices for teachers.
and woredas; as a result, the education component
• It will establish a partnership with
is being implemented in 29 selected districts the teachers’ colleges to support
against the 128 districts originally targeted. the training of community resource
persons/facilitators in delivering the out-
In parts of Afar and Somali regions, some of the of-school girls’ engagement manual.
target schools have been closed due to drought.
The guardians/parents of school-going children have
moved out of their settlements in search of water
and pasture or, if their livestock have been wiped Building partnerships
out, to settle in sites for internally displaced people.
• supporting their outreach activities There is significant potential for Ethiopian CSOs to be
• inviting them to be part of review gender-transformative. Substantively the organizations
meetings organized at different levels. are carrying out important and effective work,
including advocating for legislation and awareness
• These organizations identify child
around child marriage and FGM. For example,
marriage arrangements and potential
violence, negotiate with families to reject CARE, a CSO partner in Ethiopia, places women
child marriage, and link girls and their and girls at the centre of its humanitarian responses.
families with essential services related The organization’s programming is gender-
to ending child marriage. responsive and intersectional. It has a gender equality
and inclusion policy through which it commits
to incorporating gender equality in all the work that
Investment in and support to youth-led, it does, internally and externally. The organization
women-led and feminist CSOs also recognizes that gender is non-binary and adopts
an inclusive approach to diversity in its programming.
Partnerships are important for advancing gender- However, some CSOs ranked as gender-sensitive
transformative programming and, recognizing this, appear to lack a coherent understanding of gender-
in 2022, the Global Programme assessed the extent transformative approaches and fall short in terms
to which the CSOs were implementing gender- of structural markers. There are some gaps in relation
transformative approaches – based on the partners to how CSOs communicate their impact, illustrative
identified as focusing on promoting girls’ and women’s of weaknesses with policy and strategy, learning
rights from the previous year (four in Ethiopia). and monitoring, and knowledge generation.
The assessment aimed to guide UNFPA and UNICEF
on how better to identify and support opportunities With support in terms of conducting gender training
to advance gender-transformative approaches. and analysis it is likely that the gender-sensitive
organizations will become gender-transforming.
FIGURE 3: Assessment of interventions of partner Targeted support on policy development and guidance
organizations in Ethiopia, on the gender equality on monitoring and evaluation tools could greatly
continuum benefit these CSOs. Moreover, workshops on the
value of a gender-transformative approach will
likely improve understanding which, in the long
term, will positively influence the organizations
at structural and substantive levels.
The Global Programme also supported the Gambella The consultation among the experts and key
region Bureau of Women and Child Affairs and the stakeholders in the regions and at the federal level
Bureau of Justice in revising family law to consider will continue until a consensus is reached.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ethiopia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 42
The review and endorsement process of the family laws The model is structured around six intermediate
in Afar and Somali regions have not progressed due to outcomes and different subdomains that
resistance from community leaders and some officials. are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e.,
The main issues challenging the process include: weak-building; average-enhancing; good-
integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4).
• the minimum age of marriage
TABLE 2: Snippet of the policy maturity model
• polygamy
• the rights of an adopted child Intermediate
Sub-Domains Score
Outcome
• irregular union
• determining paternity using DNA. A1: Political Commitment
Governance
and Coordi- A2: Coordination structures
To address this, lawyers at federal level nation
are exploring ways to persuade community leaders
A3: National Action Plans
to accept minimum standards while respecting
their opinions. These consultations will continue,
Policy and B.1: Legislation, policies
and solutions are hoped for in the coming year. Legislation and implementation mechanisms
The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been The humanitarian situation resulting from the drought
defined and require certain priorities, processes, has also shifted/reduced some budgets which
and results to be achieved for each subdomain, had been earmarked to implement the multisectoral
and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from gender-transformative plan on ending child
the testing emphasized the role of the model as: marriage. There is therefore a need to periodically
track expenditure at federal and subnational levels
• a useful advocacy tool to influence federal and regional priorities, despite
the challenging humanitarian situation in the country.
• something that builds Government
accountability and action towards
elimination of harmful practices • Key priorities in 2023 are:
• a tool to review and track the implementation • supporting the midterm review of the
of a national action plan. National Costed Road Map to End Child
Marriage and FGM 2020–2024
Data collection, Policy and In 2022, the Global Programme completed a formative
M&E 2,0 Legislation
assessment that informed the development of the
National Out-Of-School Girl Empowerment Manual
1,0 and the men and boys engagement curriculum
and implementation guide. This assessment was carried
0,0 out in six regions through a qualitative approach,
including key informant interviews and focus group
discussions. The manuals were validated at different
levels, including by key ministries such as the Ministry
of Women and Social Affairs, the Ministry of Health,
Access Engagement
to Services and Participation
the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Education,
and translated into five local languages (Somali, Oromo,
Afar, Sidama and Amhara). The training of trainers
has also been provided to 88 experts at regional
Financing
and HR and woreda level (61 male and 27 female) under
the leadership of Ministry of Women and Social Affairs.
© UNICEF/UN0539162/Leul Kinfu
and non-governmental actors. Yet, the net value of the report have revealed that there are significant
in supporting programme implementation had been changes in knowledge and shifts in personal
limited by high inflation, which affected the Ethiopian attitudes towards ending child marriage. Preparation
economy. This has contributed to alerting the members for a follow-up midline survey is under way.
of the National Alliance to End Child marriage
and FGM to prioritize budgeting in their advocacy. According to local government sources, between
In addition, programmatic field visits by the federal January and June 2021, compared with the same
Minster and State Minister for the Ministry of Women period in 2022, child marriage increased by an average
and Social Affairs to selected states (Gambella, of 131 per cent across some areas in regions which
Sidama and SNNP regions) are planned to be part are worst hit by drought (Somali, Oromia and SNNP).
of the current rolling workplan with the ministry. This data, contained in an analysis supported by the
Global Programme, has shaped national, regional,
The social and behaviour change baseline survey and global-level discussions and has been crucial
initiated by UNICEF and UNFPA with John Hopkins in alerting partners to follow up on the issue;
University was completed and focuses on tracking to introduce mitigation measures, raise awareness
the contribution of the programme to changing among key actors, including media and donors,
social and gender norms. The initial findings and inform resource mobilization initiatives.
GHANA
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UN0794426/
ghana 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 47
23,024 adolescent
girls were reached with life-skills
training or comprehensive sexuality
education (CSE), including 15 girls
with disabilities, in 2022. Some
1,080 boys were also engaged
directly by the programme. © UNICEF/UN0798288/
Child marriage country context a serious concern with 18 per cent of women aged
20–24 years having given birth before the age
Child marriage has declined over the last decades of 18. There is an unmet need for contraception,
in Ghana, from about 40 per cent in the 1980s to 19 with 36 per cent of married girls, and 61 per cent
per cent in 2017/2018. Although this level is among of unmarried girls, aged 15–19 years having no access
the lowest in the West and Central Africa region, to it. Maternal mortality is one of the leading
one in five young women are still married or in union causes of death for adolescent girls in Ghana;
before the age of 18. The prevalence of young women contributing to 7.75 per cent of the maternal
married or in union before the age of 15 has stalled deaths of all ages. Early pregnancy is both a cause
at 5 per cent over the last 10 years, without any visible and a consequence of child marriage in Ghana; 2 in
improvement. Overall, child marriage is more 10 adolescent pregnancies precede marriage.
common among those who live in rural areas, in poor
households and who have little or no education.
Overall programme performance
The high prevalence of adolescent pregnancy,
mostly unplanned and unintended, remains TABLE 1: Summary of output indicator performance (2022)
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
40,302 23,024
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
1,069 1,081
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
6,887 8,441
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 185,686 590,900
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 616,304 290,987
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
882 4,216
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
13 10
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
17 7
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 516 690
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 16 19
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 2 2
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
35 35
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
5 5
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
4 5
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
0 2
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 49
2.6 MILLION
married
before age 18
© UNICEF/UN0654832/
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 51
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps increasing their engagement in vocational training,
especially for non-traditional skills (such as carpentry
The lingering effects of COVID-19, climate change and driving). Furthermore, the programme
and the Sahel crisis that has spilled over into Ghana will spend more on providing scholarships
have increased the vulnerabilities of adolescent and educational bursary packages that include
girls and their families. With the influx of migrants school fees, uniforms and sanitary pads, especially
from the Sahel region and the anticipated for the most marginalized girls who are pregnant,
challenges for both host community members mothers, married or widowed, enabling them to go
and migrant families, adolescent girls in five regions back to school or receive vocational training.
(Greater Accra, Ashanti, Bono-East, Upper-East
and Northeast) affected by the Sahel crisis have
experienced a lack of opportunities, especially Enhancing the family
in vocational training. In rural communities there and community environment
have also been reports of adolescent girls being
sexually abused, which is contributing to increases
in teenage pregnancies and school dropouts,
with some girls fleeing their communities to work
in urban areas as marketplace porters (‘kayayei’).
“ I had no idea cooking was an interesting
task even for a male: I have learned
how to build a fire and fry yam during
the implementation of the PASS
Continuous engagements through safe spaces Project. As a young boy, I feel useful
for girls and boys have provided an opportunity to my mother, which makes me proud
for adolescents to deepen conversations on matters of myself. Together with my brother
that affect them and find lasting solutions. I helped my mother early in the morning
For instance, providing platforms for adolescents to build a fire and sell a few pieces
to express themselves in a non-judgmental of yam before leaving for school.
environment gives them the confidence to make My dream is to become a chef and I
informed decisions about topics such as their intend on making my dream come true.”
relationships, childbearing and education.
— Saeed, 13, student in Nyankpala D/A primary
school and participant in the PASS project
The programme will continue to support
the Government in implementing the Safe Schools
Initiative, which is aimed at ensuring children
and adolescents are protected from sexual The Global Programme continued to partner
violence in and around schools, and at providing with the Government and CSOs to target more
gender-responsive pedagogical training communities and individuals with social and behaviour
for junior high school teachers in science, change interventions that address child marriage,
mathematics, English and social studies. adolescent pregnancies and gender inequality.
UNICEF and the United Nations Population Fund
During a gender-transformative assessment workshop (UNFPA) continued to support the use of standard
run by the Global Programme, the Government tools, such as the Child Protection Community
and civil society partners identified actions to make Facilitation Toolkits and the Child Marriage Advocacy
education systems more adolescent girl-friendly Toolkit, aimed at triggering social and behaviour
and gender-responsive. Data from the Education change. The agencies organized the structured
Information Management System and the District engagements of adolescent boys and men via safe
Health Information Management System have indicated spaces and, in some areas, they complemented
that most adolescent girls who received antenatal this by using community information centres
care at health facilities did not go back to school after and radio stations to disseminate key messages.
having their babies. To address this, it was agreed
during the workshop to further strengthen referral Overall, the programme engaged 590,900 people
pathways, especially between health and education in 35 districts through community dialogues on a
sectors, and to develop interoperability among range of issues that promote a safe and protective
relevant information management systems. environment for adolescent girls, including positive
attitudes and practices aimed at addressing child
The programme recognizes the vulnerability marriage. The Global Programme also contributed
of adolescent girls in migrant communities, and will to the scaling-up of community engagement
continue to link them to economic opportunities; interventions through the rollout of the Child
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 52
Protection Community Facilitation Toolkits, training and enhanced their capacity to become Champions
352 community facilitators and regional level of Gender Equality and Advocates against Child
government officers (156 female and 196 male) Marriage and SGBV. Overall, 3,980 boys and 4,461
in 60 new districts, bringing the total number to 160 men were engaged in gender-transformative
districts that support the crucial components of the programmes that promote healthy relationships,
Integrated Social Service (ISS) programme. The Global positive masculinities and gender equality.
Programme, by training the community facilitators,
contributed towards the engagement of, and dialogues The programme in Ghana uses traditional and social
with, an additional 1,097,378 people through sessions media channels to scale up messaging on child
supported through complementary funding. marriage, the rights of adolescent girls, and gender
equality. However, the weekly episodes of the Girlz-
Girlz television talk show, which draws big viewing
The engagement of men and boys is a critical — Rahaman is part of the Gender
Model Family of the PASS Programme
component of the Global Programme and has together with his wife Lamnatu
proven to be effective in promoting the protection
of adolescent girls in Ghana. UNICEF, in partnership
with NORSAAC, mobilized adolescent boys to form ‘I
am for Girls Groups’. These are safe spaces to support Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
boys in leading intergenerational dialogues with
men in their communities. Addressing harmful Working with adolescent boys and parents/
and discriminatory social norms against women caregivers in addressing child marriage, adolescent
and girls is also carried out via radio discussions. pregnancies and other protection issues affecting
Men from Model Gendered Households, including girls, has yielded results, particularly in addressing
the male mentors, were also engaged on combating the social and gender norms that perpetuate gender
harmful gender norms and related topics. UNFPA, inequalities and associated violence and abuse.
in partnership with International Needs Ghana (INGH) For example, intergenerational conversations
engaged men and boys through the PASS programme between adolescents and their caregivers were
to address harmful masculinities and gender norms helpful in delving into uncomfortable conversations
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 53
Strengthening systems
Child protection, education, and health systems,
including information management were strengthened
for effective and efficient delivery of results
for adolescent girls through support for the training
of service providers and the roll out of national tools
that included the Intersectoral Standard Operating
Procedures for Child Protection and Family Welfare,
Case Management SOPs for Children in Need of Care
and Protection, the Child Protection Community
Facilitation Toolkits, and the standards and guidelines
for engaging young people in health services.
within households to promote positive parenting A total of 2,095 decentralized social service
and good communication as well as challenging workers received ISS training, including virtual
discriminatory gender norms and cultural practices orientation, virtual one-week training and in-person
harmful to the development of adolescent girls. coaching sessions, while the capacity of 207 service
providers across 10 regions was strengthened
Entrenched cultural beliefs and norms and resistance for the provision of coordinated SGBV response
towards change continue to be a challenge, services as part the roll out of the Minimum Services
and changing beliefs and attitudes require constant Package for Women and Girls Subject to Violence.
awareness-raising and education over a prolonged
period. Although the engagement of men UNICEF, through the Global Programme, continued
and boys was prioritized in 2022, the programme to provide technical and financial support to the
lacks specific content and toolkits to guide Ghana Health Service in implementing the ‘Safety
facilitators on how to navigate such conversations Net’ programme. This reached about 18,425 pregnant
aimed at promoting positive masculinities girls and adolescent mothers (350 of them aged
and changing toxic narratives that perpetuate 10–14 years and 18,075 aged 15–19 years) with
gender inequality and violence against women gender- and age-responsive prevention and care
and girls. Development of such tools is a priority. services, including maternal and newborn health
care and services addressing SGBV. Some 49,725
Data-collection on community engagements has been adolescent girls (978 aged 10–14 years and 48,747 aged
strengthened with the design and roll out of the child 15–19) were provided with preventive and response
protection mobile application toolkit developed services including reproductive, maternal, newborn
by the Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies and postnatal counselling in four targeted regions.
through the integrated social services initiative. The safety net programme was scaled up to
However, dedicated time and capacity are needed an additional 394 health facilities across 44 districts
to support tracking, follow-up and reporting. in the four regions to provide gender-responsive
sexual and reproductive health services to adolescents
The programme realized the importance of continuous and young people. Some 287 service providers (87
engagement with identifiable groups in targeted males and 200 females) were trained to deliver
communities, including traditional and religious adolescent-friendly and youth-friendly health services,
groups. This provides support for initiatives which build including a social safety net, with 330 service providers
on community structures to ensure sustainability. (164 males and 166 females) being trained on the
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 54
© UNICEF/UN0231643/Dejongh
safety net electronic register (e-tracker) for effective was enhanced as lay counsellors (to complement
data capture and utilization. As part of the efforts the 10 nurses certified as cybercounsellors)
to improve access to sexual and reproductive to serve as peer facilitators/mentors to provide
health services through advocacy and information- sexual and reproductive health (SRH) counselling
sharing across all four implementing regions,146 services. A total of 4,074 adolescents (3,133 girls
adolescents (32 males and 114 females) were trained and 941 boys) were provided with adolescent-friendly
as champions/peer support persons. Peer review and gender-responsive health services through
meetings were also organized at the subnational the Adolescent Health Development programme.
level to review the progress of implementation,
and to share lessons learned and best practices.
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
UNFPA, through the Global Programme, supported
the Ghana Health Service to enhance the capacity To work towards a more cost-efficient training
of service providers to improve the provision approach, UNICEF also proposed a hybrid training
of adolescent-friendly and youth-friendly health method for the social service workforce, including
services. The programme supported the Adolescent virtual orientations on Integrated Social Services
Health and Development programme to roll (ISS) and Social Welfare Information Management
out standards and guidelines for engaging young Systems. Government counterparts were initially
people in health services, in addition to enhancing resistant to this approach, which resulted
the capacity of service providers on e-lessons in considerable delays. However, following advocacy
developed for online facilitators on adolescent and technical meetings, the Government ministries
contraception, and updating models of the agreed to proceed, as it was found to be more
Adolescent Health Manual. The Adolescent Health cost-effective with the potential for scale-up.
and Development programme uses a hybrid strategy
to train health service providers. A total of 28 service Inadequate funding in the health sector to support
providers were trained as trainers to support online home visits and outreach services by community
training and 1,507 service providers have registered health nurses has hampered the delivery of services
for the course, out of which 482 have completed to those who cannot access facilities. More
it. In addition, the capacity of 24 young people support is required for health care professionals
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 55
CSOs implementing
Facilitating supportive laws
gender responsive
interventions,, 60%
interventions
and policies
1,0
D3: National Budget execution —-
Financing
& HR 0,0
D4: National Budget amount
Access Engagement
D6: Human Resources to Services and Participation
in line with the National Strategic Framework including child marriage. It was intended to enable
to identify any financial gaps to achieve evidence-based advocacy for enhanced legal
the overall targets up to 2026. and political response to effectively support those
who are at risk of, and affected by, child marriage.
The Government allocated part of its budget
to the Domestic Violence Fund to support survivors The study on the impacts of COVID-19 on adolescent
of SGBV and child marriage. However, 2022 girls was completed by UNICEF in 2022 and is
was the first time the money had been released. being edited and designed for publication in 2023.
Nevertheless, disbursement remains a challenge. The study’s findings highlight the impacts of the
Service providers in the field are consulted less COVID-19 pandemic and school closures on adolescent
on budget issues. Joint advocacy efforts are required girls, including heightened risks of child marriage
to ensure the fund actually benefits the survivors. and unintended pregnancy, as well as restricted access
to, and utilization of, services such as adolescent
Insufficient national capacity, especially sexual and reproductive health services.
for the Domestic Violence Secretariat, remains
a challenge when monitoring and tracking UNICEF is conducting a study on the causes of sexual
the progress of the National Strategic Framework. violence in partnership with the University of Edinburgh
The Child Marriage Information Portal, managed and the Research, Statistics and Information
by the secretariat, can be improved by integrating Management Department under the Ministry of Gender,
the dashboard to track and monitor the progress Children and Social Protection. Preliminary findings
of the framework in line with the existing reporting have indicated that young women in Ghana who were
format in the Operational M&E Plan. married under the age of 15 are 9 times more likely
to have experienced sexual intimate partner violence
(IPV) in the past year, compared with women
Generating and applying data who were not married that young – the strongest link
and evidence between child marriage and sexual IPV in countries
with comparable data in Africa. The strong link
between being married as a child and experiencing
The Global Programme in Ghana invested sexual IPV during young adulthood also holds true
significantly in increasing national capacity for women who wed between the ages of 15 and 17
to generate new knowledge and evidence regarding years – with women in Ghana being at greatest risk
the challenges faced by adolescent girls in Ghana, among African countries with comparable data.
© UNICEF/UNI342040/
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES ghana UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 60
The UNICEF Ghana Child Protection team is conducting Designate for the Ministry of Gender, Children
a study on social protection and child marriage and Social Protection, with the active participation
in collaboration with the UNICEF Ghana Social Policy and engagement of technical staff from UNICEF,
and Inclusion team, with financial and technical UNFPA, Government and CSOs. A big part
support from the UNICEF West and Central of the workshop was reactivating the activities
Africa Regional Office. A gender analysis of social of the coalition to end child marriage in Ghana
and behaviour change programming for ending and to strengthen programming capacity.
child marriage is also being conducted by UNFPA
and UNICEF in collaboration with the Strategic The workshop focused on identifying opportunities
Technical Assistance for Research (STAR) initiative. for shared action among the coalition members.
The GTA process aims to incorporate gender-
UNFPA has partnered with the University of Cape transformative elements into existing workplans,
Coast to conduct a study on cohabitation in the central so the gender advocates and other key stakeholders
region where there are a high number of adolescent were asked to identify crucial areas within their
pregnancies. Cohabitation has existed side by side existing workplan where gender-transformative
with the institution of marriage for generations, as it approaches can have both an immediate,
has traditionally been regarded as a preparatory and potentially amplified, impact. Around
step towards marriage. Anecdotal evidence suggests 30 Government and NGO partners across
a rise in cohabitation among students at tertiary sectors and levels participated and discussed
institutions, including the University of Cape Coast how Ghana can further integrate GTA into
(UCC), and among minors in communities with programming in the three key priority areas:
a high incidence of adolescent pregnancies (Coastal
Regions of Ghana) who are not necessarily cohabiting
• adolescent girls’ agency, skills
in preparation for marriage. There is evidence that
and empowerment
these relationships can lead to gender-based violence
(GBV), child marriage, adolescent pregnancy, • engagement of men and boys
a drop in school participation, and mental health • adolescent girl-responsive service systems.
problems. There is, however, little known about
the social dynamics and depth of cohabitation,
or the support required by cohabitants in times Participants prioritized three types of actions
of need. UNFPA has supported the university’s Centre to move ahead within these areas of focus:
for Gender Research, Advocacy and Documentation
and the College of Humanities and Legal Studies • scale up adolescent girls’ skills,
to conduct a study of cohabitation among agency and empowerment
students and young people from the Global
• address masculinities
Programme’s target communities in central
and engaging boys and men
Ghana to inform policy and programming.
• policy and structural change through
institutional partnerships and systems-
Lastly, the programme supported the analysis
strengthening, facilitate more conversations.
of the programmatic approaches related to gender-
transformative change using the Gender-Transformative
Accelerator tool. In addition to analysing
the level of ownership of strategies and their Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
contributions to accelerate change, the gender-
transformative assessment made it possible UNFPA and UNICEF, in partnership with the other
to develop a road map to accelerate progress. United Nations agencies and development partners,
have been providing technical and financial
support to the Ghana Statistical Service to conduct
Strengthening gender-transformative the Demographic Health Survey in 2022. It will
programming to address harmful practices help better strategize the programmatic approach
in Ghana to ending child marriage, including for the Global
Programme Phase III. However, within the Global
A gender-transformative accelerator (GTA) Programme, one of the major challenges is the lack
workshop was held in September 2022, attended of funds to generate data and evidence demonstrating
by the Honourable Lariba Zuweira Abudu, Minister the changes the programme has made.
INDIA
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UN0825674/Das
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 62
india
Other states
FIGURE 1: Percentage of women and union territories
Jharkhand
Telangana
Five states account for over half of the
girls and women in India who married Tamil
Bihar
in childhood: Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Nadu
Bengal, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh.
Gujarat
Karnataka
West
Andhra Bengal
Pradesh
Rajastan
Maharashtra
Note: This map is stylized and not to scale. It does Madhya
not reflect a position by UNFPA or UNICEF Pradesh
on the le gal status of any country or area
or the delimitation of any frontiers.
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 63
3.7 MILLION
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage,
and what could be done in response.
6 MILLION
girls actively participated in life-skills
were strengthened to provide rights-
based adolescent-friendly health
services (including sexual and repro-
and comprehensive sexuality ductive health), 1,200 medical officers
education (CSE) interventions. were trained to provide adoles-
cent-friendly health services and 317
policewomen were trained on child
More than rights and child protection, including
84,000 adolescent
girls at risk of child marriage were
information on addressing child
marriage.
384
supported to enrol and/or remain in
school through the programme’s
intensive outreach mobilization of new partnerships (287
out-of-school adolescents. formal and 97 informal) were estab-
lished to deliver adolescent-respon-
sive social protection, and poverty
Nearly reduction and economic empower-
80 MILLION
community members have been
ment programmes and services.
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
4,746,395 5,603,377
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
375,000 84,090
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
1,000,000 3,735,249
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 9,993,000 13,320,308
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 28,320,000 79,385,255
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
117,745 776,580
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
95 65
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
NA NA
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 460 476
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 66 384
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 59 58
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
21 20
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
21 22
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
3 0
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
1 0
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 65
were lifted and the multisectoral adolescent tools for the elementary and secondary school levels
empowerment approaches implemented through in Hindi, Gujarati and Assamese languages. UNFPA
Government flagship schemes and platforms. These and UNICEF particularly wanted to reach vulnerable
include training, employment-related opportunities adolescent girls in remote and tribal districts with poor
and referral mechanisms via youth platforms Internet penetration and where teachers and students
and forums like Advika Udaan. The programme have no smart phones. Consequently, they supported
also helped 84,090 out-of-school adolescent girls Odisha State to integrate life-skills into outreach
to continue their education. However, this is below programmes and to contact more girls from remote
the set target due to increased school dropouts, communities through innovative strategies such as ‘call
especially in hard-to-reach communities where a student’ and ‘alternate learning platforms’. Short films
adolescent girls are forced to drop out of school due to and multimedia digital packages in local languages
lack of transportation and safe routes to school. were developed and disseminated for wider reach
among parents, teachers and community leaders.
The programme in India used contextualized
approaches to reach adolescents and their families UNICEF continued to support 10 state governments
in hard-to-reach areas and marginalized communities to implement a comprehensive school safety
through the use of innovative platforms and methods programme to provide safe and protective learning
to offer programmes on life-skills, child protection, environments for adolescent girls. In states like
and other services. It works with self-help groups, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Uttar
women’s organizations, and grass roots groups like Pradesh, girls who have been absent for 10 days
Aanganwadi Workers (AWWs), which helped reach or more are contacted by the School Education
these communities, identify adolescents and children Departments which have identified those who are
at risk, and linked them with social protection married, likely to be married or who have migrated
schemes. Adolescent empowerment programming and are at risk of child marriage or other forms
has strengthened convergence across sectors and links of exploitation. Schools which were initially
with schemes resulting in an effective response. resistant to report dropouts are now documenting
UNICEF supported the integration of life-skills into this information to prevent child marriage
the school curriculum framework in five states, as part of the district action plans. In Uttar Pradesh,
in addition to developing life-skills measurement through attendance monitoring of adolescent girls
© UNICEF/UNI435189/Kolari
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 66
by school management committees and community transformative life-skills. The state’s School Education
influencers and counsellors, 27,618 adolescent girls Department, as part of the child marriage reduction
who were either out of school or going irregularly programme, exempted admission and examination
were given support to enrol, or stay, at school. fees for adolescent girls to enrol into open school
programmes. The Women and Child Welfare
In Odisha, more than 1 million adolescents across Department women groups and panchayats
25 districts have been reached through ADVIKA, are supporting adolescent girls with enrolment into
a state initiative supported by UNICEF and UNFPA. second-chance education programmes alongside
This provides life-skills training and information enrolling younger girls directly into formal education.
on child rights, child marriage, violence against
children, gender, sexual and reproductive health, In Gujarat, a package on financial and digital literacy
and on how to access the child helpline. Sessions was integrated in the cash plus scheme, enhancing
are held every Saturday in more than 72,000 the life-skills and knowledge of 254,136 adolescent
Anganwadi Centres (community-based childcare girls. In Kutch district the re-enrolment and retention
institutions) across Odisha. UNICEF and UNFPA, of 965 adolescent girls, who had dropped out of
in partnership with Yuwaah, also launched the Advika school, were supported through collaboration with
App with the Odisha Government to link adolescents the Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation, ensuring
to life-skills and career readiness information. Some the girls’ safety on the way to and from school.
5 million girls at risk of child marriage have also
been linked to social protection schemes preventing In Madhya Pradesh, a pool of 313 master trainers
such marriages and to support their education. on life-skills education was created and six life-skills
The Advika App also helps front-line workers provide education comic books were developed with a focus
targeted life-skills education for adolescents. on self-esteem and positive body image. As a result,
357,782 girls’ knowledge and skills were enhanced
UNFPA, in partnership with the Department through sessions on child rights and protection
for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in Odisha, risks, gender and life-skills education. The master
also supported 1,150 tribal residential schools across trainers also trained teachers who then conducted
30 districts to reach 146,498 marginalized adolescent sessions in schools on gender stereotyping,
girls, building their knowledge, skills and attitudes appearance ideals and being a champion, reaching
for leading healthy lives and addressing vulnerabilities 81,000 girls. In addition, 12,919 out-of-school
such as child marriage and teenage pregnancy. children were identified and re-enrolled in schools
Principals of all the schools, in addition to nearly as part of the ‘School Chalo Abhiyan’ partnership
600 officials from districts and smaller administrative campaign led by the Education Department.
units (blocks), were also trained on reviewing
the implementation of life-skills education programmes
and the availability of life-skills education teaching Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
and learning materials in schools. UNFPA supported
the review of a curriculum for special schools, including The lingering effects of COVID-19 continued to disrupt
training 124 heads of special schools of Odisha on the programme implementation. In 2022, UNFPA
importance of life-skills education for adolescents had planned to initiate life-skills education sessions
with disabilities, particularly on issues involving in special schools supported by the Department
their sexual and reproductive health. UNICEF also of Social Security and Empowerment of Persons with
provided educational assistance to 60,686 vulnerable Disabilities in Odisha. However, reopening schools
adolescent girls in Odisha to enrol, and stay, in school. took much longer than anticipated, and Government
approvals to roll out the curriculum were delayed.
In Andhra Pradesh, UNICEF conducted surveys
to identify out-of-school adolescent girls in all districts. UNICEF has developed a contextualized curriculum
The most vulnerable were supported to establish and interventions for adolescent girls and their
weekly peer groups at village level to raise awareness families in remote tribal districts in states such
on their rights and to provide life-skills education, as Jharkhand and Odisha. However, lack of Internet
protection and empowerment. In total, 150,000 access, and poor transport, plus fears for the safety
out-of-school adolescent girls were reached with of the girls enroute to schools pose a challenge.
training and services through panchayats (village Several front-line workers (including Anganwadi
and small-town councils), women’s groups and front- workers and teachers) in these remote areas
line workers. School-based programmes reached cannot access online materials and therefore lack
a further 200,000 adolescent girls with gender- the necessary skills to interact with adolescents in a
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 67
community and faith-based leaders, adolescents UNFPA and UNICEF enabled diverse voices
and local governance representatives on ending child to contribute to a nuanced strengthening of media
marriage and promoting girls’ rights. Close to 80 and public discourse on child marriage, focusing
million people were reached through traditional on causes such as poverty, and related issues
and social media platforms, including television of consent, adolescent autonomy. UNICEF’s
and radio shows, mobile van campaigns, the ‘Mere partnerships with the media, such as community
Sapane’ (My Dreams) national essay competition, radio stations, local newspapers and TV stations,
the #EqualRightsEqualValue social media campaign has enabled it to reach millions of people through
and the International Day of Girl Child campaign. the production and broadcast of key messages, plays
In 2022, a total of 65 women-led and youth-led and community engagement programmes. In Madhya
organizations were mobilized to help challenge social Pradesh, UNFPA launched a unique ‘Digital Sathi’
norms and promote gender equality. The programme initiative to help girls become digital storytellers
also mobilized a total of 865 self-help groups (financial and empower them to use social media to voice
intermediary community committees comprising their needs and aspirations, while simultaneously
of 12 to 25 local women between the ages of 18 ensuring their safety, security and privacy online –
and 50), some through social media outreach. so far 80 girls have participated in the initiative.
UNFPA and UNICEF also supported community Lastly, the programme supported the analysis
groups, women-led and youth-led organizations, of the programmatic approaches related to gender-
including feminist organizations and those working transformative change using the GTA tool. In addition
with men and boys such as Breakthrough, Point to analysing the level of ownership of strategies
of View, CHSJ and Partners for Law in Development, and their contributions to accelerate change,
to engage adolescents and community members the gender-transformative assessment made it possible
in marginalized communities in dialogues and raise to develop a road map to accelerate progress.
their awareness on preventing child marriage
and gender-based violence (GBV). UNICEF support
for Breakthrough led to the development and roll Strengthening gender-transformative harmful
out of a gender-transformative toolkit for adolescents practices programming in India
and communities, designed and contextualized
for tribal and marginalized communities in Odisha, The India programme carried out the GTA over
Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand. In Madhya Pradesh, three days with the full engagement of sectoral
UNFPA led the design and development of a module experts and staff from selected states. Prior
(‘Ujjwal’) to engage with boys and girls in schools to the actual GTA process, the lead focal points
to promote positive masculinity – it clarifies from the UNICEF country office participated
key concepts and provides practical suggestions in two pre-call meetings to clarify
to motivate non-discriminatory behaviours the methodology of the tool and expectations;
and practices at home, in society and at school. and to discuss themes to be prioritized.
© UNICEF/UN0853111/Magray
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 69
The Global Programme and partners will prioritize: services. UNFPA support in providing rights-based
adolescent-friendly health services (including sexual
• interventions at community level in priority and reproductive health), led to the improvement
districts with adolescent girls and boys, of a total of 476 service delivery points.
families and community members, to address
GBV and challenge gender norms UNFPA also supported the training of 1,200 medical
• creating awareness with police officers in the provision of adolescent-friendly health
of schemes and helpline numbers services and information – and this led to the creation
for adolescents and community of a group of state level master trainers to improve
members and on ‘The Prohibition the abilities of district and block level medical
of Child Marriage Act’ (this has already officers in providing adolescent-friendly and gender-
been effective and can be scaled up)
responsive services. The medical officers were also
• engaging with collectives among trained on issues such as mental health, cybersecurity
the adivasi (tribal) and dalit (scheduled and given a deeper understanding of disabilities.
castes) for self-determined approaches
In Rajasthan, UNFPA supported the development
to elimination of child marriage, GBV and
and roll out of a comprehensive resource package
harmful practices in Odisha state
to conduct Health and Wellness Days in school
• dialogues with faith-based leaders and the and community settings. This incorporates
participatory development of culturally
11 themes of the two national flagship programmes
appropriate information on gender equality
and the rights of adolescent girls (RKSK and SHWP) promoting adolescent health
under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
• strengthening and leveraging existing
The resource pack equips front-line service providers
structures, led by women and young
to advocate for adolescents’ health and well-being.
people, activated under various government
programmes and schemes. Around 370,000 adolescents accessed adolescent
health services at Ujala Clinics (adolescent-friendly
health clinics) in 12 RKSK-targeted districts.
UNFPA and UNICEF support UNICEF and UNFPA have led the support to develop,
for girls’ welfare encouraged Government- design and disseminate national guidelines
led action and communication on ending child for strengthening national flagship schemes aimed
marriage, addressing school dropout and promoting at addressing child marriage and promoting girls’
access to gender-friendly services. This has also rights, including capacity-building initiatives
led to a more cohesive approach between ministries for service providers at all levels. The advocacy
towards delivering truly gender-transformative efforts by both agencies have resulted in a state-
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 71
© UNICEF/UN0853119/Magray
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 72
In Odisha, UNFPA began a strategic partnership The assessment was conducted by building
with the Department of Mission Shakti to empower on information from online resources, including
women. This three-year intervention is aimed the CSOs’ websites, reviews of available annual
at using large-scale platforms to reach nearly reports, analysis of strategy documents, social
600,000 girls with digital and financial literacy media pages, descriptions and commentary about
training, and to more than 270,000 girls the CSOs from external parties (for example funders,
with information on sexual and reproductive coalitions, or networks), and news articles.
rights and addressing harmful practices.
Although few partner organizations completed
UNFPA’s collaboration with youth organizations the survey, the desk review showed that the CSOs
and platforms such as NYKS, National Cadet Corps in India are mostly gender-responsive or gender-
and NSS helped develop strategies for youth transformative. Many of the organizations that
engagement and strengthened adolescent and youth ranked highly in their approach to gender equality
empowerment. Youth groups have been instrumental make men and boys partners in initiatives for social
in amplifying key messages on breaking gender- justice. Many of the organizations incorporate
based stereotypes, the prevention of violence the empowerment of women and girls into their
against girls, and other child protection priorities. programming and aim to change power dynamics,
norms and institutions, rather than merely focusing
on the passive delivery of support services
Investment in and support to youth-led, to women and girls. Safetip is a good illustration
women-led and feminist CSOs of a gender-transformative organization seeking
to improve safety in urban spaces and enable data-
Partnerships are important in advancing collection. This organization works to ensure that
gender-transformative programming and the people, women in particular, can make informed
Global Programme, recognizing this, assessed choices about their mobility. Its She Rises project
the extent to which the CSOs were implementing is particularly gender-transformative. It acknowledges
gender-transformative approaches. This that patriarchy places the burden of care primarily
was based on the partners identified as focusing upon women. This includes the care of vulnerable
on promoting girls’ and women’s rights in 2021 and excluded groups like children, the elderly
(54 in India). The assessment aimed to help guide and people with disabilities. It is are working towards
UNFPA and UNICEF on how to better identify a framework for gender-transformative change
and support opportunities to advance these in cities, to ensure that public spaces are responsive,
gender-transformative approaches. inclusive, safe and equitable. This organization
is strong both in terms of structural and substantive
FIGURE 2: Assessment of interventions of partner efforts to enable gender-transformative results.
organizations, on the gender equality continuum
Mahila Sarvangeen Utkarsh Manda is another
interesting example. Structurally the organization
is strong. It has two committees:
Some of the more progressive CSOs could In West Bengal, with technical support from UNICEF,
benefit from a refresher course on gender- the West Bengal Commission for Protection of Child
transformative approaches, and they could also Rights issued two memos for Kolkata and West Bengal
share positive impact stories in order to assist police with the request to treat child marriage cases
other organizations with practical suggestions on an urgent basis and for filing of First Information
for improvements. Accordingly, it is recommended Reports against all adults involved. A district-level
that a workshop, or series of workshops, be conducted training on the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 74
Act 2015, trained 265 participants including District action plans on ending child marriage
CWC members, DCPU staff, and child welfare police or child protection were developed, revised,
officers from local police stations in order to improve and implemented by UNICEF in 181 districts in 10
their ability to ensure justice for survivors and help states (increasing from 175 districts in 2021), through
them to access legal services. Some 96 village multisectoral convergence and consultations.
police and civic volunteers were also trained on child Under the district action plans, District Task Forces
protection issues with special emphasis on child were formed or sustained to monitor progress
marriage and trafficking and their role in reporting, and address limitations and way forward.
preventing and generating awareness at community
level. Capacity of service providers to follow In Assam, UNICEF extended technical support to the
protocols on child marriage prevention and reporting state action plan on child marriage and district
was also enhanced through the training of: action plans on women and children in 17 districts.
At a district level, 368 stakeholders were supported
in developing action plans and capacity-building
• 30,707 ICDS Supervisors and AWW
resulting in key interventions and messages
• 20,515 ASHA, Anwesha Clinic Counsellors on ending child marriage and GBV and in support
and Block Public Head Nurses of adolescent empowerment being incorporated into
• 3,100 teachers line departmental exercises and processes, standard
project meetings and religious celebrations.
• 1,397 paralegal volunteers,
CWC members, police
In Bihar, UNICEF provided sustained technical
• 1967 block and district officials
assistance to the Women and Child Development
in 12 intervention districts.
Corporation, Social Welfare Department and other
departments for the development of a costed
In Rajasthan, UNFPA supported the launch of the State ending child marriage state-wide campaign,
Policy for Women in partnership with the Directorate along with several other measures to prevent
of Women Empowerment (DWE) in 2021. In 2022, child marriage, including a monitoring framework.
UNFPA supported the implementation of the policy Task forces which aim to end child marriage have
by developing a multisectoral integrated action been formed in all 22 districts. In most districts,
plan outlining strategies, activities and targets they meet four times a year. Some 33 trainings
relating to health, survival, safety and protection of Task Force members were organized, and 1,028
(including child marriage, economic empowerment officials (835 men and 193 women) were trained.
and the impact of climate change). Comprehensive
resource packages (posters and videos) were In Madhya Pradesh, under the Adolescent
also developed to raise awareness about harmful Empowerment Programme (AEP), multisectoral
practices against women and girls (such as GBV, district action plans have been developed on child
dowries, child marriage, gender biased sex selection, marriage and violence against children in 16 districts.
etc.). UNFPA also supported DWE in designing The AEP also facilitated training for more than
and implementing flagship programmes such 82,000 child protection workers and stakeholders
as Beti Bachao Beti Padhao, Chirali (community- (46 per cent female and 54 per cent male) on:
based model to address GBV) and Udaan (on
menstrual health and hygiene management). • child rights
• protection
In Assam, UNICEF provided technical support
for the development of the Child Protection Policy • gender
and an analysis to identify gaps in the Prohibition • legislation related to children
of Child Marriage Act, 2006. In Maharashtra, and their application
in response to the Bill that seeks to amend
• alternative care
the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, UNICEF
provided high-level technical support for the • family strengthening
Department of Women and Child Development, • prevention of child labour
including an analysis of NFHS data trends on child and rehabilitation of child labourers
marriage and related gender indicators and a
• child marriage
review of international and national human rights
treaties and standards and facilitating consultations • skills on engaging with children
with key gender and human rights experts. • social and behaviour change communication.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 75
In Maharashtra, multi-departmental district task forces and child budget has been introduced in the Finance
(DTF) were established with the help of the Global Department’s website, BEAMS, capturing budgets
Programme in all 12 districts with a high prevalence for social protection schemes such as Nirbhaya
of child marriage. the task forces cover five key areas: fund and Fast Track Special Courts. It also indicates
the number of beneficiaries for such interventions.
• women and child development
In Rajasthan, to further address gender inequities
• education
and violence and promote adolescent empowerment,
• health the five-year-perspective plan and annual performance
• rural development improvement plan (PIP) of the Department
of Education were influenced to consolidate a gender-
• Panchayati Raj.
transformative approach in school-based adolescent
collectives. As a result, for the first time, components
District action plans with gender-transformative of engaging with boys on positive masculinities were
indicators have been formulated in seven districts included in state capacity-building programmes.
and are being drawn up in the remaining five districts.
The DTFs have been effective in implementing In West Bengal, ‘Guidelines for District Action Plan
the district action plans for ending child marriage (DAP) for Ending Child Marriage’ were finalized
and establishing a functional system at district level and rolled out state-wide with technical support
for preventing, and responding to, child marriage. from UNICEF. The guidelines provide a blueprint
The Child Marriage Eradication Programme of activities to assist each district in assessing
‘Saksham’ is being implemented in Jalgaon district the situation of its adolescents, formulating
with the support of Women and Child Development its own plan to end child marriage and promotes
and UNICEF. All Government and non-government collaboration and convergence between different line
stakeholders of the district have been trained and, departments. Direct support was provided towards
by creating master trainers among them, awareness DAP planning, preparation and reporting in 12 districts.
is being created at different Government levels Moreover, DAP monitoring and reporting through
and among the general public in urban and rural a standardized system has also been put in place.
areas. Some 100 Child Protection Committees were
formed in 1,485 villages in Jalgaon and the Chair
and members were trained on the issue of child The public policy maturity model
marriage. District child protection units of 24 districts
(outside the Global Programme) were further trained Elimination of harmful practices such as child
and have begun developing district action plans marriage requires the integration of strategic
for ending child marriage in their districts with their approaches, processes, systems and information.
District Collectors, taking into account geographical UNFPA and UNICEF recognize the role national
and sociocultural factors. In addition, a tab on gender action plans play in strengthening policy coherence
© UNICEF/UN0853072/Magray
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 76
Intermediate
Sub-Domains Score
Outcome
Governance
and Coordi- A2: Coordination structures
nation
to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization D2: National budget establishment —-
for Economic Cooperation and Development peer
review process emphasize that the plans need: D3: National Budget execution —-
Financing
& HR
• political commitment and policy statements D4: National Budget amount
UNICEF has developed and tested a policy maturity E1: Availability of Standard Operating
model and tools for assessing public policies Procedures and/or Protocols for harmful —-
to end harmful practices and achieve SDG 5.3 practices services
The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been FIGURE 3: Policy maturity assessment for India
defined and require certain priorities, processes,
and results to be achieved for each subdomain, Governance and
Coordination
and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
3,0
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2022 COUNTRY PROFILES india UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 78
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps Support will be provided by the Global
Programme in the several areas:
The major challenge at both state and district
level, is the limited ability of the various line • UNFPA and UNICEF will strengthen their
departments to work together. Collaboration engagement in high-level advocacy
is hampered by frequent changes in bureaucracy, with national and state actors for the
and a lack of continuity in strong leadership proposed national bill to raise the minimum
to enforce convergence. Other challenges include: legal age of marriage for girls.
• UNICEF will advocate with
• Law enforcement agencies are reluctant the state governments to review,
to prioritize child marriage prevention, monitor and amend state and district
and elected representatives too often action plans for ending child marriage
do not want to address the issue for fear and ensure coherence and convergence
of losing political support. between all different stakeholders.
• Subdistrict level child protection structures • The programme will continue to support
are informal and weak, and building Government workers in preventing
accountability within them requires time and responding to child marriage, connecting
and intensive effort. Increased participation girls at risk with services and integrating
at block and community level is required. programmes and services for child
brides, who are highly marginalized.
• The inclination to use increasingly punitive
measures to address child marriage increases • In Madhya Pradesh, UNFPA is in discussion
the risk of criminalizing adolescent sexuality. with the State Planning Commission for the
development of the State Women’s Policy.
• Capacity-building needs to be carried UNFPA technical support has been requested
out at institutional level to mainstream to also develop a strategy paper and action
gender-transformative approaches plan on addressing GBV and for integrating
in interventions and plans on ending child gender in the behaviour change
marriage through sustained and systematic communication framework developed by the
commitments and partnerships. Women and Child Development Directorate
(WCD) – addressing child marriage through
• Grassroot level committees such as village
rights-based approaches will be integral to the
level child protection committees need to be
policy documents proposed to be developed.
strengthened as they are key to addressing
GBV and child marriage. Advocacy with • In Odisha, UNICEF and UNFPA will continue
the states should continue to highlight to provide technical assistance to the
the importance of grassroot committees. WCD in addressing child marriage, with
additional assistance on addressing violence
against women through multisectoral
coordination (involving the Departments
of Health, Home, Mahila and Shishu Desks).
• In Bihar, UNFPA will support research
on developing an investment case for ending
child marriage in partnership with the A.N.
Sinha institute of Social Studies.
• The programme will continue
to focus on helping the Government
to ensure child marriage interventions
are able to reach the most hard-to-
reach and marginalized communities.
• The programme will also continue
to enhance important structures at district
and community level, including DTF and
grass roots-level committees for better
implementation of district action plans.
MOZAMBIQUE
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UNI435071/Zuniga
mozambique 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 81
5 MILLION
men, women, adolescents and children 4,500 vulnerable adoles-
were reached through an integrated cent girls, including those out of
package of messages on essential school, were trained on life-skills,
family practices, with a specific focus entrepreneurship and gender-trans-
on child marriage. formative sexual and reproductive
health and rights.
More than
480
More than
18,000 individuals
participated in dialogue sessions on
child journalists from
24 districts, trained by the programme,
produced more than 150 news reports
the consequences of, and alternatives and published 30 new videos on child
to, child marriage, the rights of marriage, girls’ empowerment,
adolescent girls and gender equality. gender inequality and other issues
related to gender discrimination.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 82
Child marriage country context years were married by the age of 18, compared with
36 per cent in urban areas. As seen elsewhere in the
Mozambique has one of the highest rates of child world, the drivers of child marriage in Mozambique
marriage in the world and has the second highest rate include high levels of poverty, gender inequality,
in the eastern and southern Africa region, with the poor access to quality education, limited life choices,
practice affecting almost one in every two girls. Some cultural norms, especially those related to initiation
48 per cent of young women in Mozambique were rites, and high levels of teenage pregnancy.
first married or in a union before the age of 18, (14 per
cent before the age of 15), compared with a regional
average of 38 per cent in southern and eastern Africa. Overall programme performance
Child marriage is more prevalent in rural areas TABLE 1: Summary of output indicator performance
where 56 per cent of young women aged 20–24 (2022)
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
56,533 4,500
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
2,040 1,113
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
3,200 16,070
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 21,342 18,079
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 3,470,000 5,000,000
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
200 268
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
2 1
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
100 109
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 46 46
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 4 4
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 4 3
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
10 10
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
6 7
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
4 3
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
1 0
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 83
In 2022, 4,500 marginalized adolescent girls were Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
reached through the mentorship approach with
comprehensive programmes on life-skills, and on Several factors affected the programme’s ability
sexual and reproductive health and rights education. to meet some of the targets set for adolescent girls’
The programme also supported adolescent girls empowerment. One challenge is that the process
involved in small businesses to form savings of reintegrating out-of-school children back into
and loans groups to strengthen their mutual formal education in Mozambique takes place
support. This included working together to borrow during the first semester, at the beginning of the
equipment or to jointly produce products year, and students cannot be enrolled in school
for sale. Further, the Global Programme, through once this period has passed. As the programme
the school reintegration process, supported 1,113 was unable to register all targeted vulnerable
marginalized adolescent girls to register and return and marginalized adolescent girls during this
to formal education during 2022. The programme period, the target could not be met for the year.
partners helped to dissolve these girls’ marriages
before the school reintegration process. In addition, delays in contracting implementing
partners and disbursing funds to them due to
The child helpline, Linha Fala Crianca (LFC), the start of a new country programme for UNFPA
supported by the Global Programme, continues in Mozambique resulted in knock-on delays
to provide vital information and support to adolescent in implementing activities. In 2023, the programme will
girls, including training for peer mentors on reporting focus on accelerating the implementation of activities
mechanisms for GBV and child marriages cases. and scaling up the school reintegration process.
Mozambique is home to
1.6 nearly 34 million child
brides; 1 in 2 young
MILLION women were married
married in childhood.
before
age 15
4.7 MILLION
married
before age 18
© UNICEF/UNI439823/
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 85
an effective way of reaching and engaging them in cases of child marriage, since they may know,
as role models in the promotion of gender equality, or be related to, the husband or parents of the
positive masculinities and bodily autonomy. Those married girl. The new partnership with International
participating have shown an openness to discuss, learn Child Development Programme (ICDP) will help
and adapt a new mindset concerning masculinities overcome these challenges, given that ICDP has an
and traditional male gender roles in society. emergency fund that will help support survivors
to be linked to services and will also support
The community dialogues set up by the programme following up the case management process, from
in targeted districts in Nampula province reached referral to closure of the case (e.g., legal assistance
a total of 18,079 individuals in 2022. These dialogues and psychosocial support/reintegration).
are aimed at breaking the culture of silence that
continues to hamper the reporting and condemnation The implementing partners noted good
of violence against children, including child marriage. synergy between community activists, mentors,
The Global Programme, through its partnership with community and religious leaders and paralegals
Secretaria de Estado at provincial level, was able concerning the identification and reporting
to engage 268 community leaders in activities of cases of child marriage in 2022. This is an
aimed at addressing child marriage, violence area which will be further strengthened in 2023,
against children and birth registration. More than by including the ICDP as a coordinator.
300,000 people were reached with key messages
in these areas, which contributed to the increase In 2023, the Global Programme will strengthen
of reported cases in community meetings. partnerships with ‘matronas’ (traditional birth
attendants) and traditional leaders at the community
The behaviour change communication campaign level to address initiation rites as a harmful
launched a powerful and highly emotional song practice and a form of violence against children.
on child marriage on the International Day of the Girl There were four other main priorities for 2023:
(11 October 2022). 2 The song ‘Quero Voar’ (I want
to fly) has reached more than 5 million people • Provincial advocacy training sessions
with its messaging on ending child marriage. Five on ending child marriage will be replicated,
graffiti paintings were also painted on schools and in with member organizations of the Coalition
crowded public spaces in Rapale district, Nampula for the Elimination of Child Marriages
city, Nametil village in Mogovolas district, Monapo and Government representatives in Nampula
province, after positive outcomes
and Lalaua, containing messages on child marriage,
being shown in Zambézia in 2022.
violence against children and positive masculinities.
The process was videoed and disseminated through • The application of dedicated, tailored tools
social media, reaching 819,815 people and recording for community work on masculinities and men
by partners trained in 2022 will be monitored
6,865 engagements with 255 comments through
to identify results and potential challenges.
the different UNICEF social media platforms.
• Evidence will be collected
at a national level to identify current
dominant models of masculinities
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps and opportunities for synergies with
other programmes and actors.
The beginning of the new UNFPA and UNICEF
• More evidence will be collected
country programmes affected the implementation
on the impact of community dialogues
of programme activities as new partnership ending child marriage.
agreements had to be established.
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps a framework for monitoring results. UNICEF
will also prioritize the replication and scale-up
UNICEF also assessed the operations of the of interventions to address GBV in schools.
Reference Groups coordination mechanism led by
the Attorney General’s Office. High staff turnover Other priorities for 2023 include:
has resulted in several members of staff being
unclear about their roles. The assessment provided • continuing support for the health, women
key recommendations to improve this situation, and social action district service (SDSMAS)
including the need to strengthen the role of the through the partnership with the ICDP, and by
technical working groups which are responsible paying directly for psychosocial support
for tracking cases and providing support for children. for survivors of child marriage and violence
Reference groups should balance prevention • adapting standard operating procedures
activities with providing coordination and services. on case management in emergency settings
for social workers, based on the experiences
Limited Government capacity and funds hampered collected in Cabo Delgado during 2022
efforts to coordinate the multisectoral mechanism • continuing to support LFC to train all peer
for integrated assistance to girls and women who are mentors and to provide a trend analysis
survivors of gender-based violence (GBV). The VAC on reported child marriage cases.
referral mechanism is also a multisectoral approach,
which makes implementation and monitoring
a challenge, as well as hampering efforts to transform
deeply entrenched societal attitudes, norms, Building partnerships
stereotypes and gender roles. At Government
level, there is also a clear gap between making The programme maintained strategic partnerships
policy commitments and translating them into with key Government institutions to strengthen
programmatic interventions with dedicated resources. the provision of services to children, as well
as to ensure service provision is sustainable beyond
Implementation of the manual for circles of interest the lifespan of the programme. In particular, positive
in schools remains weak. UNICEF has supported engagements with the Supreme Court are facilitating
its implementation through the training of facilitators the introduction, in 2023, of mobile courts
and teachers and recently in the development of a in Zambézia province for dealing with cases of child
guide for its implementation that includes the areas marriage and VAC. The programme’s partnership
of gender and climate change, and other life-skills with the Attorney Office (PGR) continues with
development themes. The CI platform has brought the aim of further strengthening the coordination
a great impact on the development of life-skills of service provision through reference groups.
as well as in the prevention of VAC and GBV. A lack
of materials has been identified as an obstacle UNFPA, through its partnership with NAFEZA,
for the creation of circles of interest, so UNICEF has provided technical advice and capacity-
plans to create a CI kit in 2023 to overcome this building support for member organizations
bottleneck and support its implementation. With of ‘Girls not Brides’ (CECAP), particularly
the support of UNICEF Innocenti, the programme on advocacy and influence building.
also plans to conduct a qualitative study on the
implementation of the CIs, so that recommendations
may be drawn on how to strengthen implementation Investment in and support to youth-led,
and how to measure the impact on behaviour women-led and feminist CSOs
change and gender-transformative attitudes.
Partnerships are important for advancing gender-
Another UNICEF priority in 2023 will be to transformative programming and, recognizing this,
develop a school-based mentoring manual and to in 2022, the Global Programme assessed the extent
implement a mentoring programme, to help girls to which the CSOs were implementing gender-
remain in school and transition from primary transformative approaches. The assessment was based
to secondary school. UNICEF will also support on those partners identified as focusing on promoting
the Ministry of Education and Human Development girls’ and women’s rights from the previous
in translating recommendations from the Safe to Learn year (there were nine of these in Mozambique).
initiative into practical actions and suggesting The assessment aimed to help guide UNFPA
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 88
and UNICEF on how better to identify and support The assessment revealed that more than 50 per
opportunities to advance gender-transformative cent of CSOs in Mozambique are gender-responsive
approaches within the Global Programme. or gender-transformative. Coalizo, a non-profit group
which works to empower girls, in order to reduce
FIGURE 3: Assessment of interventions of partner the prevalence of child marriage and teenage
organizations in Mozambique, on the gender equality pregnancy, is an impressive organization. Its theory
continuum of change focuses on empowering girls, mobilizing
families and communities, providing services
and establishing and implementing laws and policies.
CSOs implementing
gender transformative The organization spends most of its budget
interventions,, 11%
interventions
CSOs not assessed,
assessed , 11%
on advancing the rights of women and girls. It has
confirmed that it has an active process to understand
the gender dynamics and consequences of its work
and to adapt its work to overcome gender inequalities.
CSOs implementing Further, it appears to actively monitor its progress
gender unqeual
interventions,, 11%
interventions to tackle gender equality; changing public opinion
and public narratives is a central part of its work.
A gender-transformative approach appears to be
required for all projects of the organization.
CSOs implementing
gender sensitive
CSOs implementing
gender responsive
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
interventions,, 22%
interventions
interventions,, 44%
interventions
© UNICEF/UN0851827/Zuniga
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 89
costs associated with child marriage activities. action plans play in strengthening policy coherence
Development partners finance the non-overhead to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization
costs of activities, including recurring costs. While for Economic Cooperation and Development peer
both sets of inputs are necessary to implement child review process emphasize that the plans need:
marriage interventions, the high share of development
partner funding raises sustainability challenges
• political commitment and policy statements
for child marriage interventions, as well as coordination
and efficiency challenges, as development partner • policy coordination mechanisms
funding is often disbursed to non-state implementers. • systems for monitoring,
analysis and reporting.
Overall, the study concludes that the establishment
of strategies to counter child marriage is a significant
potential systemic anchor point for integrating UNICEF has developed and tested a policy maturity
child marriage into country budgets, but that model and tools for assessing public policies
strategy governance and capacity weaknesses, to end harmful practices and achieve SDG 5.3
coupled with broader budget and expenditure by 2030 in 12 countries (Bangladesh, Burkina Faso,
system barriers, hampered the integration of child Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Lebanon, Mozambique,
marriage into country and sector budgets. Nepal, Niger, Sierra Leone, Uganda and Zambia).
Currently, UNICEF is providing technical and financial The maturity model provides a framework
support to the Ministry of Gender, Children for key national stakeholders to review and assess
and Social Action to develop the new National Plan national policy approaches and systems for
of Action for Children III (PNAC). The evaluation
of the national strategy to eliminate child marriage
• eliminating and preventing female genital
has also been approved by the Council of Ministers
mutilation (FGM) and child marriage
and UNICEF has supported the Government in sharing
the results with key stakeholders in Maputo. • identifying priorities or critical investments
• building consensus around the interventions.
© UNICEF/UN0851814/Zuniga
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES mozambique UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 91
TABLE 2: Snippet of the policy maturity model The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been
defined and require certain priorities, processes,
Intermediate and results to be achieved for each subdomain,
Sub-Domains Score
Outcome and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
A1: Political Commitment
Governance
and Coordi- A2: Coordination structures • a useful advocacy tool
nation
• something that builds Government
A3: National Action Plans accountability and action towards
elimination of harmful practices
Policy and B.1: Legislation, policies
Legislation and implementation mechanisms • a tool to review and track the implementation
of a national action plan.
C1: Independent complaint mechanism
exists for children and women
Engagement
C2: Civil Society Engagement, including On average, overall country ratings on a 4-point scale
and Partici-
women and children
pation ranged from 1.8 (weak-building in Bangladesh) to 3.0
C3: Community based mechanisms
—- (good-integrating in Zambia). Financing and human
for Harmful practices prevention
resources (rating 1.3) emerged as the area where
D1: Financing of harmful practices countries were rated the least, while governance
services and coordination (rating 2.7) were rated highly.
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps men, poverty and the high level of consumption
of alcohol and other drugs. The study reported that
The delay by the Ministry of Gender, Children the boys and young men involved in the programme
and Social Action in approving the child-friendly suggested that it should include sessions on economic
brochure on the new child marriage law (which took empowerment and business startup kits also for boys,
10 months) delayed, in turn, the implementation given the many challenges to find employment
of activities dependent on the roll out of the brochure. which have risen during the COVID-19 pandemic.
© UNICEF/UN0765159/Pedro © UNICEF/UN0765161/Pedro
NEPAL
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UNI405146/Laxmi-Prasad-Ngakhusi
nepal 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 95
10.2 MILLION
Nations Member States and other stakeholders
to improve their collective understanding
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage,
and what could be done in response. individuals (boys, girls, women and
men) were reached by traditional
and social media messaging on child
Child marriage country context marriage, the rights of adolescent
girls and gender equality.
There are 4 million child brides in Nepal, 1.2 million
of whom were married before the age of 15. In 2019
the prevalence of child marriage among girls stood
at 33 per cent, which represents a decline from
More than
48,000
58 per cent in 1994. However promising, this progress
is not enough to meet the SDG target to end child
marriage by 2030. If the progress observed over boys, girls,
the past 10 years continues, the prevalence will be 27 women and men participated in group
per cent by 2030. If the reduction is doubled, the rate
education/dialogue sessions on the
will 18 per cent in 2030 and 6 per cent in 2050.
consequences of, and alternatives to,
child marriage, the rights of adolescent
girls and gender equality.
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
35,000 57,011
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
7,908 8,339
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
11,500 11,158
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 55,000 48,617
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 1,708,396 10,231,573
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
320 1,178
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
3 1
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
150 350
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 132 264
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 8 13
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 2 1
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
6 9
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
2 1
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
4 3
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
1 0
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
package, have been appointed as local leaders/ assessment process on the empowerment scale
mentors/champions, making their voices heard developed by the programme in 2020, participants
through effective advocacy to end child marriage. of the Rupantaran course yielded significantly
higher empowerment outcomes than the control
UNFPA and UNICEF have continued to use group, according to the measurement tool, which
the Rupantaran training and, in total, 11,011 marginalized uses data from the beginning and end of the social
girls were reached through the in-person group and financial skills sessions. These findings suggest that
sessions during 2022. The girls participating Rupantaran participants have higher empowerment
in the sessions, including the peer leaders, have outcomes than those from similar demographic
displayed positive changes in knowledge, skills backgrounds who did not complete the programme.
and attitude. Based on pre-test and post-test
results, 92 per cent of peer facilitators reported The programme has influenced life decisions around,
an increase in knowledge and an enhancement of skills for example, education and marriage, allowing
to deliver the gender-transformative Rupantaran the girls to also become change-agents in their
life-skills sessions. The number of respondents communities. Many of the success stories depict
who reported an understanding of gender- significant changes in the lives of the Rupantaran
based violence (GBV) increased by 40 per cent, adolescents, such as gaining access to their rights
while the number of respondents who reported through birth registration and receiving formal
an understanding of child marriage increased education. The programme has had an impact,
by 14 per cent between the pre- and post-tests. not only on the lives of adolescents, but also
on the lives of families and communities.
In 2022, 10 per cent of the Rupantaran participants
were surveyed via the KOBO platform, using
questions from the Global Programme indicator
reference manual to assess the knowledge, skills
and attitudes of participating girls and boys,
“ I am assisting these adolescents
in my community in becoming more
empowered and successful. My group
parents and other adult stakeholders. This survey has 22 teenagers, and I feel more
was carried out in addition to the programme’s responsible for them. “Rupantaran”
regular pre- and post-testing to assess change. has also altered my life.”
Some 64 per cent of girls aged 15–19, and 24
per cent of 10–14-year-old girls, who participated — A Rautahat district facilitator in Madhesh Pradesh
in the programme reported increased confidence
in their ability to negotiate and delay early-marriage,
and they feel comfortable speaking without fear. Furthermore, participants have reported an overall
change in themselves and have demonstrated strong
Similar changes have been observed among other leadership skills. Some of them, in Sudurpaschim,
adolescent girls participating in the programme. Karnali, Lumbini and Madhesh provinces, for example,
In a community-based, cross-sectional, case/control have participated in the Government’s planning,
4.1 MILLION
married
before age 18
budgeting, and monitoring platform and have been assistance stayed in school. The implementing partners’
successful in ensuring the inclusion of activities with outreach workers closely monitor their performance
budget allocation for addressing child marriage. and provide continuous support as needed.
Some of the older girls (aged 15–19 years) find Non-formal girls’ access to education (GATE)
it hard to re-enter formal schooling due to a long classes were supported in the same way as
gap away, and due to the difficulty in catching up with in previous years to provide out-of-school girls with
the curriculum and their peers. In response, economic literacy and numeracy skills and to facilitate their
empowerment activities for girls in the Rupantaran enrolment in formal school. Some 1,022 girls
programme are carried out in collaboration with local were enrolled in GATE classes, with two dropping
government and women’s cooperatives/women-led out in the middle, and 95 per cent (968 out of 1022)
organizations. Some 200 girls in Madhesh province successfully enrolling/re-enrolling in formal school.
are being given cash assistance by local governments The programme continued to provide mentorship
to take part in these activities, depending on specific to assist the girls completing the GATE classes
criteria. In another province, girls who have completed to remain in school. The mentorship assistance
Rupantaran social and financial skills-training are linked also included coaching classes to help girls
with a women’s cooperative for income and skills catch up to age-appropriate educational levels,
development. In 2022, 563 girls received livelihood and this support reached 5,932 girls who had
training and support from women’s cooperatives. been mainstreamed into formal schools in 2021.
© UNICEF/UNI448635/Laxmi-Prasad-Ngakhusi
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 99
education or Rupantaran classes has proved difficult. the programme is now converting the Rupantaran
One of the programme’s key challenges is the social and financial skills-training package into
need for ongoing engagement with girls, families a mobile learning app to meet the growing
and communities even after the Rupantaran sessions demand for e-learning materials. The curriculum
and other activities are completed, to achieve long- for Rupantaran will be digitized to achieve
term and sustainable change in the communities.
It is not possible to extend the sessions in the • an efficient path to scale
same communities while leaving other vulnerable
• a resilient system capable of continuing
communities without assistance. To address this,
service delivery in emergency situations
the programme has begun experimenting with
an exit strategy in some municipalities by developing • delivery of the programme with
a handover/programme continuity plan which greater long-term cost efficiency.
is carried out with the technical and financial support
of local governments. This approach is proving
to be quite effective, particularly in terms of making
local governments more accountable, and will Enhancing the family
be promoted in all the targeted municipalities. and community environment
Managing the families’ expectations, particularly
regarding livelihood support from the programme The programme works with a diverse group
and local governments, is another challenge. The girls of stakeholders, including adolescent and young boys,
are expected to begin earning as soon as they to improve their knowledge and attitudes so that they
are trained and linked to a women’s cooperative. can demonstrate more gender-equitable attitudes
The girls cannot be linked to economic activities and become community advocates for girls’ rights.
without strong mentorship and support; lack of proper Intergenerational dialogues on toxic masculinities,
guidance is a challenge as they progress in their how masculinity influences boys’ and men’s attitudes
economic empowerment journey. Partnerships and behaviours, and the impact of toxic masculinities
with local governments and holding them on their overall development are held between young
accountable is critical to ensuring sustainability boys and adult men. The intergenerational dialogue
and expanding coverage. The programme platform has provided a safe space for 11,158 boys
has been successful in many target municipalities and men to discuss issues that they would otherwise
in integrating the child marriage programme into find difficult to share. The programme’s interactive
the Government’s annual plans and budget through tool has further aided in igniting healthy discussions
evidence-based advocacy and coordination. and developing gender-transformative attitudes that
promote positive masculinities and gender equality.
Political intervention in hiring GATE facilitators,
political manipulation of bursary assistance eligibility Some 48,617 parents and guardians of girls enrolled
requirements, school retention, and expectations in Rupantaran have completed three days of parenting
from families for long-term support are some of the education through the Rupantaran adult package.
difficulties encountered in the work with supporting This version has, among other things, helped parents
girls’ education. It is crucial to maintain contact with improve their understanding and knowledge of gender,
local political leaders and increase their accountability harmful practices, changes during adolescence,
for the programme to reduce the impact of political parenting skills, consequences of child marriage,
interference. Additionally, mobilizing political GBV and financial literacy. The parenting programme
leaders has been shown to be a successful tactic has helped to bridge the gap between parents
in persuading families to send their daughters and children and has become a way for adolescents
to school. Creating a standard operating procedure and parents to learn together. This has helped create
(SOP) is crucial to eliminate conflicts of interest a safe and supportive environment for adolescents
and other potential harmful impacts from community and their families. Parents who attended the sessions
or political leaders. As an example, in 2022, the Cash reported positive changes in their interactions with
Plus Programming SOP for partners was developed. their children. They believe that, after attending
the training, they will be able to communicate,
The COVID-19 pandemic was largely responsible interact and listen better to their adolescent children.
for the global shift towards e-learning and online Prior to the training, they would never involve or ask
education and service delivery, including in Nepal. the children’s opinions on any matters concerning
Recognizing the need to diversify learning platforms, their lives. Some of them also mentioned imposing
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 100
have learned of legal provisions concerning violence in these municipalities. The programme has also
against women and children, including child marriage, provided technical support to CEHRD in developing
as well as available services to improve accessibility. a five-year strategic plan for the federal, provincial
and local level networks for inclusive education.
The programme has supported age-appropriate Continued advocacy and technical assistance were
and gender-appropriate health service provision provided to ensure the appointment of gender
for adolescents, particularly girls, by training health focal persons in the 61 municipalities’ schools.
service providers on this, as well as equipping facilities
with adolescent-friendly materials, and certifying
adolescent-friendly service (AFS) sites. Similarly, Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
six adolescent-friendly information corners have been
established in schools near the AFS sites to promote Although policy documents call for the establishment
service uptake. Some 84,795 adolescents (42,596 of a complaint response mechanism in all public
girls and 42,199 boys) were reached through these schools, not all local governments have invested
services in 2022. The activities related to health equally in training and coordination. As a result,
service provision were supplemented by community- continued advocacy is required with local
wide awareness-raising initiatives to address gender- governments for financial support to achieve this.
related and age-related biases. The training for service
providers also covered sexual and reproductive Having a safe and confidential platform for children
rights, and there has been a shift in their attitudes to express their concerns has greatly aided
as a result. Previously, they reported being hesitant the improvement of the learning environment
to provide contraception to young girls and would in schools. Even though the majority of the complaints
ask for their marital status, in violation of the policy. are about infrastructure improvements, addressing
During a joint monitoring visit with the health all the concerns can be difficult due to limited
office and municipal team, 10 AFS sites were pre- resources. In such cases, schools can work with local
certified using quality improvement tools for AFS governments to gain the necessary support. On issues
certification. Even though all sites received scores of violence and discrimination, action must be taken
of more than 80 per cent, the team discovered some right away. In schools where the school management
gaps. In addition, 65 health service providers from committee and gender focal person are very active,
five programme districts received a five-day training issues are handled immediately and confidentially,
on adolescent sexual and reproductive health. highlighting the need for improvements
to the function of the school management
The programme provided technical assistance committees and of the gender focal persons.
to the Centre for Education and Human Resource
Development (CEHRD) in developing: Many AFS sites have been difficult to certify and/
or strengthen due to a lack of space within existing
health facilities. Many health care facilities only
• the complaint response mechanism
have 2–3 rooms, which are mostly already in use.
protocol implementation plan
Many health office staff and local government focal
• visual complaint response persons are not fully sensitized to the importance
mechanism training materials
of the adolescent sexual and reproductive health
• a training manual for gender focal points and rights programme, or the role of the certification
• monitoring tools for tracking the use process in improving the quality and standard
of the complaint response mechanism. of health service delivery. To address this issue,
the programme has continued to work closely
with health care workers to improve their
Capacity-building activities targeting municipal knowledge, skills and sensitivity, as well as their
officials and head teachers were carried out in understanding of the certification process.
100 municipalities across the four Global Programme
implementation provinces of Madhesh, Lumbini, AFC service delivery is tailored specifically to the
Karnali and Sudurpaschim in 2022. They were also needs of young people. As a result, the competency-
trained on gender issues, such as GBV and child based training curriculum must be updated with
marriage, in addition to the complaint response new knowledge and include visits to model AFHS
mechanism guidelines. Gender focal points have been sites. Self-assessment on this is performed by trained
appointed in 500 schools, and networks for girls health service staff using the QI and certification
and inclusive education have been established tool for adolescent-friendly SRH service.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 102
© UNICEF/UNI448621/Laxmi-Prasad-Ngakhusi
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 103
Nepal stood out as a country with very gender-positive The programme has been successful in linking
and gender-transformative CSOs, many of which adolescent girls who are not in school with local
actively participated in the assessment process. women’s cooperatives that promote economic
Roughly two thirds of the CSOs assessed in Nepal empowerment. Through this involvement,
were ranked as either gender-positive or gender- the community-based women’s networks’ promise
transformative. LIFE Nepal, a women and youth-led for raising awareness and fostering parent
organization, was notable for its impressive approach and community involvement has been fulfilled.
towards ensuring commitments to child safety. Based on this, engagement with women’s groups
It works to ensure that all its volunteers, vendors will be increased in other initiatives in 2023.
and stakeholders are aware of their core mandate
and have a good understanding of child protection. Nepal is an example of where CSOs adopt gender-
All the staff and volunteers are required to show transformative approaches in a context marred
a commitment to child protection and safeguarding by poverty and patriarchy. Given that many of the
by signing a code of conduct. Notably, LIFE CSOs rank highly, there may be value in hosting
also encourages its vendors to commit to child a workshop with all CSOs that enables them
safeguarding. LIFE set a target of creating a gender- to share ideas, lessons, and challenges, and support
responsive and child protection-friendly environment one another with strategies to implement gender-
at the local level. To measure progress against this transformative approaches in their work.
target, it uses an indicator that collects data on child
marriage in the targeted areas on an annual basis
by mobilizing girl champions to complete a checklist. Facilitating supportive laws
and policies
NFCC was ranked highly for its gender-transformative
approach at the structural level. NFCC believes
it cannot work for gender equality if it is mainly a male Despite the pandemic and the fluid political
organization. Therefore, it has created an environment situation caused by local, provincial and federal
where women, who feel safe and empowered, elections, Nepal made significant progress towards
are leading and working on issues that affect women. ending child marriage in 2022. The programme
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 104
© UNICEF/UNI448367/Laxmi-Prasad-Ngakhusi © UNICEF/UNI448470/Laxmi-Prasad-Ngakhusi
During the year, the federal government • eliminating and preventing female genital
issued the Children 2022 regulation, mutilation (FGM) and child marriage
replacing the 1995 regulation, which specifies
• identifying priorities or critical investments
the services available to children who are survivors
of violence, abuse or neglect. Given the importance • building consensus around the interventions.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES nepal UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 105
The model is structured around six intermediate The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been
outcomes and different subdomains that defined and require certain priorities, processes,
are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e., and results to be achieved for each subdomain,
weak-building; average-enhancing; good- and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4). the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
© UNICEF/UNI448541/Laxmi-Prasad-Ngakhusi
considerable opposition from women’s rights and copies of the report were widely distributed.
organizations, the legal community and the health Case studies depicting changes among girls reached
community, this proposal quickly lost steam. by the programme have been documented and shared
across multiple platforms, including social media.
Service providers have room to manipulate provisions
in accordance with their interests and convictions The programme continued to generate evidence
because of the inconsistent nature of several through pre-testing and post-testing of girls in the
laws, regulations and legal provisions. Because Rupantaran programme, using the ‘Power In Nepali
of this, underprivileged children and adolescents Girls’ scale and the KOBO survey. Furthermore,
are sometimes denied access to basic services, adolescents from the programme were trained
including social welfare, birth registration, citizenship and mobilized in protection monitoring and incident
and economic empowerment. Initiatives to develop reporting through a KOBO-based survey, to monitor
the capacity of service providers should concentrate the situation of children and women and report
on gender and sexuality as well as the technical cases of violence, abuse and exploitation.
and legal aspects of child marriage, in order to change
service providers’ attitudes and behaviours. A study to understand the sexual and reproductive
health and rights status of adolescents and youth
It is quite challenging for local government to lobby in Nepal was initiated in 2022, with a draft report
the provincial and federal governments for resource set to be finalized in 2023. The study assessed
allocation and expenditure monitoring without adolescents’ and youth’s sexual and reproductive
budgeting or costing their action plans for ending health awareness, perceptions, needs, practices,
child marriage. It is necessary, and will be stressed and participation, including their views on the
through combined advocacy and assistance, to have subjects of GBV and child marriage. A total of 2,436
a budgeted multisectoral gender-transformative adolescents and young people aged 10–24 years
plan on eliminating child marriage across ministries were recruited from three provinces. The study’s
and departments at subnational levels. key findings show that adolescents and youths
in Nepal have a basic understanding and awareness
of SRH, but their knowledge is still significantly limited.
Generating and applying data Menstrual taboos continue to exist for adolescents
and evidence and youths. The work towards eradicating child
marriage is progressive, with several prevention
interventions initiated for social norm changes;
A study was conducted to identify legal however, there is still a need for advocating
implementation gaps in Nepal relating to child and raising awareness about the consequences
marriage. The study findings were shared with of harmful practices due to the persistent dominance
relevant stakeholders, including Government agencies, of patriarchal mind-sets and a low value of girls.
NIGER
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UN0535822/Dejongh
“ Isessions
feel very useful in the community since I started attending the exchange
as a girl correspondent, because I am invited to the meetings
and this proves that I am important. Things have really changed since
I became a protection correspondent because I feel proud to help my friends
and sisters and all the friends respect me and everyone wants to talk with
me to enjoy the messages I transmit. This changed many things in my life,
such as hygiene and sanitation and especially the danger of child marriage,
because often it is we who ask our parents to marry us as soon as we see a
friend of the same generation getting married, even if we are studying.”
— Habsatou Djibo, 16, Mai Yodo village, rural commune of Ollélewa, Zinder
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES NIGER UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 108
NIGER 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES NIGER UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 109
19,603
to improve their collective understanding
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage,
and what could be done in response. adolescent
girls actively participated in life-skills
or comprehensive sexuality
Child marriage country context education (CSE) in programme areas.
3,000
2 million of whom were married before the age
of 15. The prevalence of child marriage among
girls stands at 76 per cent, the highest in the world
adolescent girls
by far. There are no signs of progress in eliminating were supported by the programme to
the practice to meet the SDG target to end child enrol and/or remain in primary or
marriage by 2030, and hence the projected secondary school.
prevalence will remain the same as today’s
levels until there are signs of improvement.
94,870 individuals
(boys, girls, women and men) partici-
pated in dialogue sessions on conse-
quences of, and alternatives to, child
marriage, the rights of adolescent
girls and gender equality.
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
16,000 19,603
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
3,000 3,000
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
16,000 15,165
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 81,320 94,870
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 2,255,000 0
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
291 544
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
2 5
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
8 0
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 8 10
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 4 5
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 1 1
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
2 0
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
2 1
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
1 1
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
0 1
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
Some 348 girls in the programme trained in various Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
income-generating activities, including:
Child marriage can be effectively delayed by ensuring
adolescent girls stay in education or in other
• the manufacture of beauty products
vocational training. However, overall investment
(perfume, soaps and creams) and household
products (liquid soaps for floors and dishes) in keeping girls in schools or engaged in economic
empowerment activities is limited. The programme
• food processing (peanut oil extraction,
is establishing innovative partnerships with the private
manufacture of peanut cake and paste)
sector to link and refer adolescent girls for support
• gardening (landscaping towards economic empowerment and training.
and planting of moringa)
• video production. The experience of adolescent girls participating
in the ‘Community Approach to Child Protection’
(PDAC) meetings, enabling them to share their
The 2022 evaluation of the National Strategic perspectives on human rights and issues affecting
Plan to End Child Marriage 2019–2021 revealed them, allows the community to better understand
it has taught and enabled girls to act individually their motivations for change and provides
and collectively to refuse child marriages. Girls them with the necessary support.
are increasingly influencing decisions by seeking
the support needed to escape marriage, which is a
violation of their rights. The evaluation showed that, Enhancing the family
among adolescents who attended and completed and community environment
the seven-month course of life-skills sessions, 4 out
of 5 refused to accept or stay in a child marriage.
The PDAC mobilizes communities to work with
In 2022, the programme supported the reintegration adolescents, religious and traditional leaders,
of 3,000 adolescent girls into formal education community and women’s organizations and schools
and alternative education. To support the continuity to address harmful gender norms and prevent child
of learning for children, UNICEF signed a memorandum marriage. Communities are required collectively
of understanding with the Social Change to explore the option of delaying the age of marriage.
Factory and Search for Common Ground to set Such discussions must respect the desire of families
up an e-learning platform (http://voixdesjeunes. to uphold their traditions, while exposing the harm
org). Partnerships have also been formalized with associated with the practice and reinforcing human
cellular phone companies (Zamani, Airtel and Moov) rights principles. A greater voice should be given
to support connectivity and distance learning. to girls themselves while, at the same time, supporting
5 MILLION
married
before age 18
the strong engagement of men and boys. Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
Families must be convinced that enough people
in the community will support – or at least tolerate There is a lack of follow-up of the commitments made
– a move to delay marriage. In 2022, 15,165 boys during public declarations to end child marriage
and men were engaged in community dialogues in communities and villages. The child protection
to address negative masculinities. Boys were also services unit in charge of monitoring and following
engaged in interactive role-plays as females to help up public declarations is understaffed and under-
to deconstruct sexist stereotypes they have inherited. resourced. This is also affecting the implementation
of village action plans to end child marriage.
Findings from the evaluation of the Strategic The programme is supporting the use of the Rapid
Plan to End Child Marriage show steady progress Pro platform for data-collection in the villages
in engaging traditional and religious leaders in the to support the monitoring and follow-up of actions.
elimination of harmful practices, including child
marriage. Interviews with these leaders highlight The mobilization and involvement of the leaders
their degree of involvement, ownership and support in a religiously conservative context such as in Niger
for interventions that address harmful gender has proven effective in leveraging their influence
norms. Some of the traditional and religious leaders and galvanizing broader community support.
have taken the initiative by creating positions
for women in their courts, including ‘magagias’
in charge of girls’ schooling, child marriage Strengthening systems
and gender-based violence (GBV) issues. Some
leaders have also allocated portions of land to girls The programme continued to reinforce community-
and women for agricultural development. Overall, based child protection mechanisms that are effective
with the mobilization and engagement of these in addressing social norms. In 2022, the programme
leaders, 94,870 community members participated supported the Government in its efforts to eliminate
in dialogues promoting gender-equitable norms, child marriage by establishing 454 new village child
including raising the age of marriage for girls in 2022. protection committees, bringing the total to 2,209.
© UNICEF/UN0535953/Dejongh
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES NIGER UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 113
where they lead discussions on various themes FIGURE 3: Assessment of interventions of partner
related to girls’ rights in Niger. One of the girl-led organizations, on the gender equality continuum
organizations that emerged after the summit was Fada
des Filles. In Niger, Fada is traditionally a community
space for speech, exchange and decision-making
reserved for men and boys. The Fada is also a space
of male solidarity. The concept of ‘Fada des Filles’ CSOs not assessed,
assessed , 40% CSOs implementing
was born from the recognition of the need for girls gender sensitive
interventions,, 40%
interventions
to have appropriate spaces for speech, solidarity
and decision-making within communities to contribute
to the social transformation of women and girls
in Niger. The Fada des Filles is composed of 30
young girls from various professional and academic
backgrounds who have benefited from capacity-
building allowing them to raise awareness, advocate
with all types of stakeholders and play the role CSOs implementing
of role models for younger girls. They use their time gender unequal
interventions,, 20%
interventions
to get in touch with other girls and boys with whom
they play the role of elders, share their knowledge
and encourage school-going girls (from peri-urban
neighbourhoods) to embrace scientific careers.
The assessment was conducted by building
Girls from peri-urban neighbourhoods in major on information from various online resources,
centres in the Maradi, Tahoua, Tillabéry and Zinder including the CSOs’ websites, reviews of available
regions are also mobilized through their participation annual reports, analysis of strategy documents,
in popular interactive theatre as Young Actresses social media pages, descriptions and commentary
of Change (JAC). These girls have found a space about the CSOs from external parties (for example
to express their views on the (non-)realization of their funders, coalitions, or networks), and news articles.
rights and the urgency for their communities to find
solutions. The scenes focus on various themes related CSOs in Niger were not ranked highly
to the problems experienced by boys and girls in the assessment, though the CSOs do appear
in the neighbourhoods. The JAC are young girls to make an effort to include targeted populations
and boys aged 12–20 who are out of school, and who in strategic programming.
are committed, through interactive theatre, to making
their contribution to the creation of a more inclusive
environment that respects children’s rights. Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
© UNICEF/UN0826378/Dejongh
Facilitating supportive laws of child marriage was taken into account in the
and policies amendments. Members of this committee discussed
with UNFPA, UNICEF and other technical and financial
partners the recommendations from a study on the
The National Strategic action plan to End Child part of the legislative framework which covers GBV and
Marriage 2019–2021 was evaluated during harmful practices , during a three-day workshop.
2022 with the participation of all stakeholders.
UNFPA and UNICEF worked together to support
the evaluation process. Recommendations have The public policy maturity model
been made and will be used to develop a new plan.
In addition, the issue of child marriage has been Elimination of harmful practices such as child
selected as a major focus of the interventions of the marriage requires the integration of strategic
Economic and Social Development Plan 2022–2026, approaches, processes, systems and information.
which will facilitate the mobilization of resources UNFPA and UNICEF recognize the role national
for the financing of the new strategic plan. action plans play in strengthening policy coherence
to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization
The year was also marked by the establishment of the for Economic Cooperation and Development peer
National Child Protection Committee in accordance review process emphasize that the plans need:
with the 2019 Presidential Decree. The signing of the
decree is a condition of the Government’s access • political commitment and policy statements
to World Bank budget support. It establishes child
• policy coordination mechanisms
protection committees at all levels – from the village
to the national – with the main aim of contributing • systems for monitoring,
to the elimination of child marriage,. The World analysis and reporting.
Bank’s budget support was accompanied by a fund
to support the establishment and operation of 50 UNICEF has developed and tested a policy maturity
communal child protection committees. This support model and tools for assessing public policies
will continue in 2023 with the creation of 150 additional to end harmful practices and achieve SDG 5.3
committees, adding to the 454 created in 2022. by 2030 in 12 countries (Bangladesh, Burkina Faso,
Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Lebanon, Mozambique,
The Ministry of Justice set up a national committee Nepal, Niger, Sierra Leone, Uganda and Zambia).
in charge of the reform of the Criminal Code and Code
of Criminal Procedure whose purpose is to carry The maturity model provides a framework
out a general review of the substance and form for key national stakeholders to review and assess
of these two documents to, in particular, integrate national policy approaches and systems for
all the amendments contained in scattered laws,
but also the relevant provisions of the international, • eliminating and preventing female genital
regional and subregional legal instruments to which mutilation (FGM) and child marriage
the Niger is a party and propose other useful
• identifying priorities or critical investments
amendments. Advocacy continued to ensure that
the recommendation on criminalizing the practice • building consensus around the interventions.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES NIGER UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 116
The model is structured around six intermediate The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been
outcomes and different subdomains that defined and require certain priorities, processes,
are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e., and results to be achieved for each subdomain,
weak-building; average-enhancing; good- and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4). the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
A3: National Action Plans On average, overall country ratings on a 4-point scale
ranged from 1.8 (weak-building in Bangladesh) to 3.0
Policy and B.1: Legislation, policies
Legislation and implementation mechanisms (good-integrating in Zambia). Financing and human
resources (rating 1.3) emerged as the area where
C1: Independent complaint mechanism
countries were rated the least, while governance
exists for children and women
and coordination (rating 2.7) were rated highly.
Engagement
C2: Civil Society Engagement, including
and Partici-
women and children
pation FIGURE 4: Policy maturity assessment for Niger
C3: Community based mechanisms
—-
for Harmful practices prevention
Governance and
Coordination
D1: Financing of harmful practices
services
3,0
D2: National budget establishment —-
Data collection, Policy and
M&E 2,0 Legislation
0,0
D5: National Budget monitoring
and review
© UNICEF/UNI229285/Tremeau
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES sierra leone UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 119
18,220
In March 2022, the Global Programme and partners
led a high-level side-event at the sixty-sixth session
of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW),
adolescent
a session which culminated in the CSW66 Agreed girls actively participated in life-skills
Conclusions, calling for action to achieve gender or comprehensive sexuality education
equality and the empowerment of all women in programme areas.
and girls in the context of policies and programmes
on climate change, and environmental and disaster-
risk reduction. This session, “No Time to Lose: Child
3.3 MILLION
Marriage and the Triple Crisis”, enabled United
Nations Member States and other stakeholders
to improve their collective understanding
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage, individuals (boys, girls, women and
and what could be done in response. men) were reached by traditional or
social media messaging on child
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls
Child marriage country context and gender equality.
18,600
at 30 per cent, compared to 51 per cent in 1994.
However, the average annual rate of reduction would
need to be 30.6 per cent, compared to the observed boys and men
4.2 per cent in the last decade, to be able to eliminate participated in group education on
the practice by 2030 as set out in the SDGs. harmful masculinities, gender equality
and on addressing harmful
gender norms.
Nearly
40,000 individuals
(boys, girls, women and men) partici-
pated in dialogue sessions on conse-
quences of and alternatives to child
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls
and gender equality.
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated
22,000 18,220
in life-skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol
500 1,155
and/or remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
10,750 18,662
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 31,750 39,754
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 350,000 3,329,509
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
1,000 1,865
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
1 1
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
45 44
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 16 16
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 10 0
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 7 7
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
16 0
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
5 3
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
5 3
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
0 2
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
Tablets were provided in safe spaces in three of the Through qualitative interviews in November 2022,
districts to pilot innovative teaching methods and safe space mentees reported various changes within
inclusivity. These were successfully used to advance themselves and in their lives. They reported:
life-skills sessions for adolescent girls. The tablets have
allowed the mentors to utilize innovative teaching and
learning materials such as recordings of adolescent- • increased knowledge on their
friendly lessons. These lessons were developed by rights and responsibilities
the Ministry of Basic and Senior Secondary Education • increased awareness of the risks of teenage
with UNFPA support during the COVID-19 pandemic. pregnancy and early-marriage and that
They feature adolescents speaking about issues in the they now can say no to marriage
National Life-Skills Manual, including child marriage and • increased sense of self-worth and self-respect
teenage pregnancy. They also include materials such
• improved hygiene and knowing
as dramatizations of possible real-life scenarios. This is
how to take care of themselves during
the first time that adolescents in hard-to-reach areas of their menstrual periods
Sierra Leone have had access to such materials. The use
• being more respectable
of the audio material also promotes inclusion within the
in their communications to different
safe spaces for mentees as well as mentors, for instance
people around them
those who are not very literate, have visual impairments
or dyslexia. Mentors have reported increased • being able to think critically
and make informed decisions
attendance and focus during lessons in safe spaces
about their lives and futures
thanks to the tablets as sessions are more interesting
and interactive, and safe space mentees have reported • knowing the value of education.
better understanding of the content; that they learn
more about the topics, and that they focus better during
lessons. The mentors and volunteers have been trained
on the use and care of the tablets, collecting data using
KOBO Toolbox, how to use Gmail and Google drive, and
how to use soft copy manuals and audio files to advance
“ Child marriage is bad. If I want
to go to school but my parents decide
to give me to a man that is above me,
life-skills sessions and their own capacity as trainers. and I don’t like that man, I will not accept
and I will say I want to learn. Due to this
The life-skills interventions have had a positive programme I will be able to say no to it.”
impact in the lives and the mindset of the girls
(and boys) participating in safe spaces. — Adolescent girl in a safe space in Pujehun
922,900
married
before age 18
© UNICEF/UNI229264/Tremeau
With the encouragement and awareness exams. In addition, FGM is widespread and adolescent
on the value of education through the safe girls are taken away for initiation rites, often resulting
spaces, as well as educational support to some in them dropping out of the safe space programme.
of the most vulnerable girls, many that had dropped
out have now returned to school. Empowerment initiatives in schools are affected
by poor attendance due to lack of menstrual hygiene-
friendly facilities in schools and a lack of sanitary
© UNICEF/UN067472/Phelps
and a training manual for in-service teachers Furthermore, 147 survivors were supported to access
was developed. Training of trainers on CSE legal services. GBV response services were also
was conducted, with 14 School Quality Assurance supplied in the One Stop Centres, to 446 GBV.
Officers and Supervisors were trained from
Koinadugu and Pujehun districts. A national
coordinating committee on CSE was also established Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
and launched, led by MBSSE and co-chaired
by UNFPA. The members of this, all key stakeholders, There were several challenges identified in 2022:
then formed working groups to coordinate
and support the roll out of CSE in schools.
• A major concern is that there are insufficient
safe homes for GBV survivors – those
UNFPA supported the operation of four adolescent- pursuing justice normally return to their
friendly SRH hubs in hard-to-reach areas in Koinadugu communities, which can compromise
district. The hubs are located in underserved areas them and put them at risk.
near safe spaces supported by the programme, • Family support units have limited resources
to enhance referral pathways. UNFPA also to deal effectively with GBV cases.
supported seven One Stop Centres for survivors
• In hard-to-reach areas, transportation
of GBV run by the Ministry of Gender and Children’s
and difficult terrains hinders the protection
Affairs in Koinadugu, Pujehun, Moyamba, Bonthe, of GBV survivors. For instance, getting them
Kailahun, Karene, Port Loko and Western Area to the hospital as well as to family support
Urban (Freetown) districts. Additionally, five centres units or to legal services is a major challenge.
run by the NGO Rainbo Initiative) were supported, • Services are free in SRH hubs, however,
in Western Area Urban (Freetown), Kenema, STD drugs are not available and have
Bombali, Bo and Kono districts. The Rainbo Centres to be paid for, which has a bad effect
supplied a range of services to 1,576 GBV survivors. on adolescent girls’ sexual health.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES sierra leone UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 125
Addressing GBV and SRH requires a comprehensive The assessment ranked 60 per cent of the Sierra
and multidisciplinary approach and sustainable action Leone CSOs as gender-transformative and another
requires continuing coordination between all relevant 20 per cent as gender-positive, which suggests that
ministries, departments, agencies and stakeholders. they are engaging meaningfully with issues relating
Efforts to increase engagement and involvement to gender-transformative change and that there is work
at community, state and national levels. leading to systemic positive change. The Prevention
First Initiative, which aims to accelerate the prevention
of GBV, serves as a good model in terms of strategic
Building partnerships thinking and learning and evaluation. Notably,
it organizes focus group discussions and surveys
before starting any programme, as it believes that this
Investment in and support to youth-led, will help people understand their challenges better
women-led and feminist CSOs and, together, they will be better able to suggest
suitable solutions. They also provide a forum
Partnerships are important for advancing gender- for feedback during and after their programmes
transformative programming and, recognizing this, and incorporate suggestions in programmes.
in 2022, the Global Programme assessed the extent
to which the CSOs were implementing gender- GADNET is another positive example of an organization
transformative approaches – based on the partners amplifying the voices of those it works with. It relies
identified as focusing on promoting girls’ and women’s on an inclusive approach in confronting negative
rights from the previous year (five in Sierra Leone). stereotypes and challenges related to the attainment
The assessment aimed to provide guidance to UNFPA of gender justice. One of its biggest achievements
and UNICEF on how to better identify and support is the establishment of the Sierra Leone national girls’
opportunities to advance gender-transformative summit which seeks to empower girls and young
approaches within the Global Programme. women to know their rights and have the confidence
to speak on issues that directly, and indirectly, affect
FIGURE 3: Assessment of interventions of partner them. The young participants are given an opportunity
organizations, on the gender equality continuum to share recommendations with key stakeholders,
which the organization says has had a big effect.
TABLE 2: Snippet of the policy maturity model The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been
defined and require certain priorities, processes,
Intermediate and results to be achieved for each subdomain,
Sub-Domains Score
Outcome and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
A1: Political Commitment
Governance
and Coordi- A2: Coordination structures • a useful advocacy tool
nation
• something that builds Government
A3: National Action Plans accountability and action towards
elimination of harmful practices
Policy and B.1: Legislation, policies
Legislation and implementation mechanisms • a tool to review and track the implementation
of a national action plan.
C1: Independent complaint mechanism
exists for children and women
Engagement
C2: Civil Society Engagement, including On average, overall country ratings on a 4-point scale
and Partici-
women and children
pation ranged from 1.8 (weak-building in Bangladesh) to 3.0
C3: Community based mechanisms
—- (good-integrating in Zambia). Financing and human
for Harmful practices prevention
resources (rating 1.3) emerged as the area where
D1: Financing of harmful practices countries were rated the least, while governance
services and coordination (rating 2.7) were rated highly.
The Global Programme and its partners are working © UNICEF/UN0473337/Duff/VII Photo
© UNICEF/UN0757975/Abdul
“ This knowledge helped me realize that my father was denying me the rights
of deciding the man to marry and the right time of getting married.
I am now an empowered woman: I know my rights and I can defend myself.
With knowledge in family planning and prevention of gender-based violence,
I am now able to report my father whenever he tries to harass me and
my siblings […] I’m currently using the skills I acquired from the trainings
to tailor clothes and make snacks which I sell to earn money to support
my family. The business helps me to take care of my children and pay rent.
Whenever I am sick, I have money to go for medical treatment unlike before.”
— Kyosimire, participant in the Empowerment and Livelihood for Adolescents programme
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES uganda UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 130
uganda 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES uganda UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 131
similar global, regional, and national initiatives, child marriage and other forms of violence against
encouraging coordinated and comprehensive girls. Although the legal age threshold for marriage
approaches across sectors and at all levels. in Uganda is 18 years, getting married formally
or informally before then is common. Child marriage
In March 2022, the Global Programme and partners continues to affect nearly half of all girls in Uganda.
led a high-level side-event at the sixty-sixth session Some districts, for example, Busoga (58 per cent),
of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), Acholi (59 per cent), Bunyoro (58 per cent) and Tororo
a session which culminated in the CSW66 Agreed (52 per cent) have higher levels of child marriage
Conclusions, calling for action to achieve gender compared to central districts, such as Kampala, Wakiso
equality and the empowerment of all women and Mukono, which have a prevalence of 21 per cent.
and girls in the context of policies and programmes
on climate change, and environmental and disaster-
risk reduction. This session, “No Time to Lose: Child
Marriage and the Triple Crisis”, enabled United
Nations Member States and other stakeholders
to improve their collective understanding
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage,
and what could be done in response.
204,181
More than
3 MILLION
13,880
boys, girls, women and men were
reached by traditional or social media
messaging on child marriage, the adolescent
rights of adolescent girls and gender girls were supported by the pro-
equality. gramme to enrol and/or remain in
primary or secondary school.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES uganda UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 132
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated in life-
203,690 204,181
skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol and/or
13,692 13,880
remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
42,000 78,713
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 126,000 301,842
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 3,116,374 2,997,765
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
2,245 3,373
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
14 14
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
235 551
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 319 415
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 4 4
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 9 9
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
21 15
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
3 3
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
2 3
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
2 8
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
4.9 MILLION
married
before age 18
© UNICEF/UN0822829/Wamala
contributed to the learning and skills-training of 7,090 as well as conflicts and insecurity, internal
out-of-school adolescents, including the return displacement (especially in the Karamoja region),
to school of 879 pregnant girls and child mothers. the continued influx of refugees especially from
the Democratic Republic of Congo and the effect
Additionally, 1,051 over-age out-of-school adolescent of public health emergencies such as COVID-19
girls accessed alternative accelerated education and Ebola. The outbreak of Ebola in Uganda
programmes at primary and secondary levels in two in September 2022 also limited the implementation
refugee-hosting districts. The Global Programme also of, and engagement with, programme activities,
supported 4,907 out-of-school adolescents (3,708 girls especially in the last quarter of the year.
and 1,441 boys) to attain literacy and numeracy skills.
The life-skills tool kit and the sexuality education
framework need to be adapted for marginalized out-
Social networks built around young people’s (EMAP). In subcounties where these structures
clubs, such as those for sports, art and caring groups are present, there has been evidence of GBV
for the environment are important entry points prevention and response and the promotion of SRH
for creating safe spaces for adolescent girls. services. The open discussions led by the community
The Global Programme uses these spaces to share mobilization programme SASA! on healthy
critical information on SRH and sexuality education relationships, positive masculinities and harmful
and for referral to services. There is an opportunity gender norms deepened understanding on:
to scale up this approach, to reach more groups
of out-of-school adolescents and young people. • supportive roles of men
• human rights
The engagement of young people from marginalized
and disadvantaged backgrounds as agents of change • positive engagement and relationships
is essential. Volunteers and peers can support with women, boys and girls
the scale-up of skills development interventions • child marriage, GBV and SRHR.
and other actions aimed at adolescent empowerment
within formal systems and at community level.
During 2022 IRC, Action Aid and district government
The programme’s priorities in 2023 include: structures reached 78,713 men through the male action
groups, EMAP and ‘men alone’ dialogues. The male
• expanding the implementation of the action groups rescued 20 girls from child marriages
structured adolescent life skill training or FGM in districts where these harmful practices exist.
using the adolescent innovative life-skills
tool kit and the global UPSHIFT social
“
entrepreneurial skills programme It was in 2020 during the COVID-19
• using the Empowerment and Livelihood lockdown when I met a man
for Adolescent programmes to deliver who convinced me to get married
sexuality education for in- and out- to him and since the situation at home
of-school adolescents was beyond and my parents could
• continuing to support the national campaign not afford food, I was forced to get
to end teenage pregnancy and child marriage married. While with my parents in the
• further engaging with the Government village, I used to struggle fetching
at national and decentralized levels firewood for sale to afford basic needs
to scale up the life-skills programme, for myself and when movements
and ensuring its sustainability, especially and businesses were restricted due to
among out-of-school adolescents COVID-19, I could no longer do any
• strengthening cross-sectoral collaboration business, the only option was to accept
with BEAD and the education sector to get married. After getting married
• strengthening engagement with young people in November 2020, my husband started
as agents of change in mobilizing out-of- mistreating me until I was forced
school adolescent girls to return to school. to come home in February when I was
pregnant. Upon getting back to my
parents, they took me back by force
and I stayed under mistreatment
Enhancing the family until I gave birth. After giving birth,
and community environment my husband could not provide for me
with any support until I was rescued
by one man who works with Action
The Global Programme supported, in target districts, Aid as community change agent. These
the dissemination and implementation of the talked to my mother, counselled and she
SRH Male Involvement Strategy, run by the Ministry accepted me back home. He convinced
of Health, and GBV Male Involvement Strategy, my parents to take me back to school,
run by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social which my mother accepted.”
Development. This led to the emergence of strong
social change structures such as male action groups — Lynnette
and Engaging Men through Accountable Practice
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES uganda UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 136
© UNICEF/UN0757935/Abdul
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES uganda UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 138
© UNICEF/UN0822692/Wamala
commitments and enables it to track the achievement and women. In 2022 the Global Programme supported
of the SDGs while upholding ensuring the principle the judicial system to deal with 88 per cent of sexual
of ‘leaving no one behind’. The revised policy, guides and GBV cases, including cases of child marriage.
and informs stakeholders on the urgency for focused
planning, evidence-based resource allocation,
results-based implementation, and accountability The public policy maturity model
in respect to persons with disabilities, and marginalized
adolescent girls who are vulnerable to child Elimination of harmful practices such as child
marriage and other harmful practices. marriage requires the integration of strategic
approaches, processes, systems and information.
The Global Programme continued to support national UNFPA and UNICEF recognize the role national
and subnational action plans on the dissemination action plans play in strengthening policy coherence
and implementation of the menstrual hygiene to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization
management guidelines, male engagement strategy for Economic Cooperation and Development peer
and the national guidelines for school re-entry review process emphasize that the plans need:
for adolescent girls as well as the sexuality education
framework in over 15 districts. The programme also
• political commitment and policy statements
supported the training of district focal persons
on gender-responsive child-friendly budgeting. • policy coordination mechanisms
• systems for monitoring,
The programme further supported improvements analysis and reporting.
to the Justice Law and Order sector (JLOS) to help
survivors of VAC and GBV, including child marriage,
to access justice. Some 68 key officials, including UNICEF has developed and tested a policy maturity
High Court judges, the JLOS technical team, model and tools for assessing public policies
registrars, deputy registrars, assistant registrars, to end harmful practices and achieve SDG 5.3
chief magistrates, the police, the office of the director by 2030 in 12 countries (Bangladesh, Burkina Faso,
of public prosecutions, prison staff, the Ministry Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Lebanon, Mozambique,
of Gender Labour and Social Development, Nepal, Niger, Sierra Leone, Uganda and Zambia).
and advocates from private practices acquired
enhanced knowledge and skills to support survivors The maturity model provides a framework
of sexual and GBV, including children, women and girls, for key national stakeholders to review and assess
refugees, internally displaced people and people national policy approaches and systems for
with disabilities. The programme used the media
to raise awareness about trials for sexual and gender- • eliminating and preventing female genital
based violence, and on the key roles of the judiciary, mutilation (FGM) and child marriage
the office of the director of public prosecutions,
• identifying priorities or critical investments
probation and social welfare officers and the
community in promoting justice for adolescent girls • building consensus around the interventions.
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES uganda UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 141
The model is structured around six intermediate The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been
outcomes and different subdomains that defined and require certain priorities, processes,
are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e., and results to be achieved for each subdomain,
weak-building; average-enhancing; good- and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4). the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
A3: National Action Plans On average, overall country ratings on a 4-point scale
ranged from 1.8 (weak-building in Bangladesh) to 3.0
Policy and B.1: Legislation, policies
Legislation and implementation mechanisms (good-integrating in Zambia). Financing and human
resources (rating 1.3) emerged as the area where
C1: Independent complaint mechanism
countries were rated the least, while governance
exists for children and women
and coordination (rating 2.7) were rated highly.
Engagement
C2: Civil Society Engagement, including
and Partici-
women and children
pation FIGURE 3: Policy maturity assessment for Uganda
C3: Community based mechanisms
—-
for Harmful practices prevention
Governance and
D1: Financing of harmful practices Coordination
services
3,0
D2: National budget establishment —-
Data collection, Policy and
M&E 2,0 Legislation
D3: National Budget execution —-
Financing
& HR
1,0
D4: National Budget amount
The programme will continue to work on expanding The programme supported the multisectoral Task
and strengthening partnerships to ensure that budgets Force on child marriage under the leadership of the
are allocated for the implementation of these plans. Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development.
The task force initiated the assessment of the
Uganda has developed several policies, in line impact of COVID-19 on child marriage and FGM
with international human rights standards, aimed and its implications for adolescents during 2022.
at preventing child marriage, and protecting the rights The findings of a pilot study, conducted in three
and well-being of marginalized adolescents. However, districts, were presented during the National
the next step is implementing and enforcing existing Symposium on the Well-Being of the Girl Child.
laws and policies, and ensuring public awareness. The findings have several implications for policy
and programming that are mutually reinforcing.
Generating and applying data The data and evidence generated from these
and evidence studies guided high-level stakeholder dialogues
and consultations, including engagement with
parliamentarians at national level and district
The Global Programme supported a committee council representatives, which are shaping
set up by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Government policies and commitment towards
Development on child well-being and also the national addressing the risk factors driving child marriage.
multisectoral Task Force on child marriage.
This support contributed to the development The Global Programme will build on its partnership
of a comprehensive Government research agenda and support of the Strategic Technical Assistance
(2022–2025) which listed key areas and issues to be for Research (STAR) initiative to explore data
investigated, in order to generate data and evidence and evidence generation on child marriage
for policies and strategies to combat child marriage. to inform programme strategy and direction.
© UNICEF/UN0792788/Tibaweswa
YEMEN
COUNTRY PROFILE
2022
© UNICEF/UNI422198/ALfilastini
yemen 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES yemen UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 145
30,000
led a high-level side-event at the sixty-sixth session
of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW),
a session which culminated in the CSW66 Agreed adolescent girls
Conclusions, calling for action to achieve gender actively participated in life-skills or
equality and the empowerment of all women
CSE in programme areas.
and girls in the context of policies and programmes
on climate change, and environmental and disaster-
risk reduction. This session, “No Time to Lose: Child
More than
50,000
Marriage and the Triple Crisis”, enabled United
Nations Member States and other stakeholders
to improve their collective understanding individuals
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage, (boys, girls, women and men)
and what could be done in response. participated in group education
or dialogue sessions on consequences
of and alternatives to child marriage,
Child marriage country context
the rights of adolescent girls
There are 4.3 million child brides in Yemen, 1.6 million and gender equality.
of whom were married before the age of 15. According
to data from the Yemen Demographic and Health
Survey (DHS) in 2013, 32 per cent of women aged Nearly
2,400
20–24 years had been married before turning 18 and
9 per cent before the age of 15. Despite a reduction
girls were
in child marriage prevalence from 63 per cent
in 1988, the speed of progress is not rapid enough
supported by the programme to enrol
to meet the SDG target of eliminating child marriage and/or remain in school.
by 2030. If the observed progress over the past
25 years continues, child marriage prevalence
will still be at 21 per cent by 2030; however, if the More than
8,600
slightly accelerated observed progress over the past
10 years is doubled, it is estimated that 9 per cent
individuals (boys,
of all girls will still be married in childhood by 2030.
girls, women and men) were reached
by mass media (traditional and social
media) messaging on child marriage,
the rights of adolescent girls and
gender equality.
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated in life-
4,000 29,789
skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol and/or
500 2,393
remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
2,700
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 35,564 50,429
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 37,500 8,600
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
144
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
1
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
16
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 47
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
1 1
to end child marriage
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis 1 1
and was admitted into the shelter Life-skills and awareness-raising sessions, along
where I felt secure, I received great with literacy programmes, helped promote self-
support starting from psychosocial esteem and problem-solving skills among girls
sessions and ending with assigning and enabled them to interact with others effectively.
a lawyer to help me get a divorce. Group psychosocial support activities in safe
My condition improved dramatically spaces for women and girls enabled adolescent
after psychosocial support sessions, girls to form support groups and exchange
and after receiving my divorce papers. successful experiences with each other.
I am finally free and can complete
my education like girls of my age”.
4.3 MILLION
married
before age 18
Despite the substantial challenges with security An holistic approach helped create social
and political instability in the country, the Global acceptance for some of the interventions
Programme was able to support 2,393 girls aged for adolescent girls, such as raising awareness
10–19 through UNFPA’s 20 non-formal literacy around menstrual hygiene, and life-skills which,
classes in 16 targeted districts using the RELFLECT if delivered separately from a general education,
Methodology (Regenerated Freirean Literacy through would be difficult for targeted communities
Empowering Community Techniques). These classes to accept. UNICEF is prioritizing and mobilizing
target child marriage survivors, adolescent girls different sectors to provide multisectoral
who have not got the opportunity to go to school, interventions for adolescent girls to address all their
marginalized girls and those affected by the vulnerabilities. The diversity of the services provided
conflict and displacement. As of December 2022, by UNFPA’s implementing partners also enabled
259 girls had been re integrated into the formal survivors to be referred to various services, in one
educational system after gaining the necessary location and from the same entity, which helped
skills through the informal literacy classes. build trust, enhanced confidentiality and ensured
the safety of the girls accessing services.
Challenges, lessons learned and next steps Due to the success of the non-formal literacy
programme, the local communities have asked
Overall, programming in Yemen has been impacted for expansion and have insisted on including
by the protracted conflict and humanitarian crisis over young girls and boys that are 20 years old and
the last decade. In some districts literacy classes are above. Moving forward, the Global Programme
conducted in schools, but most of these schools are partners will work towards mobilizing alternative
in poor condition and lack the necessary furniture (for funding channels to expand non-formal literacy
example, chairs and tables are broken, and there is no programmes in additional districts, not targeted
lighting). Adolescent girls living in remote areas face under the Global Programme, as well as to provide
further obstacles such as higher transportation costs cash assistance for girls who cannot afford to access
that have led many to drop out of the literacy classes. safe spaces and non-formal literacy classes.
© UNICEF/UN0851592/ALfilastini
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES yemen UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 149
Strengthening systems
In view of the increased incidence of gender-based
violence, UNFPA and the Ministry of Public Health © UNICEF/UN0717994/DotNotion
© UNICEF/UN0663885/Schermbrucker
zambia 100%
Child marriage threatens the lives, the well-being In 2022, the international community made
and the futures of girls around the world. Globally, key commitments to end child marriage at global
the prevalence of child marriage has declined and regional forums. On 15 November 2022,
by around 15 per cent since 2010. Nevertheless, the United Nations General Assembly Third Committee
COVID-19, climate change and conflict have resolution on child, early and forced marriage, 1 led by
had lasting effects on poverty, school dropout Zambia and Canada, was adopted by consensus.
and inequality, triggering increases in child A total of 125 Member States sponsored the resolution
marriage. UNICEF estimates that the COVID-19 (compared to 114 co-sponsors the last time
pandemic alone will have put more than 10 million the resolution was put forward in 2020). Countries
additional girls at risk of child marriage by 2030. which sponsored the resolution for the first time
included: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Ending child marriage is a global priority: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Nepal
93 governments have signed up to Sustainable and Sri Lanka. Several of the countries have a high
Development Goal (SDG) target 5.3 to end child, early prevalence of child marriage — and, by sponsoring,
and forced marriage, and 43 countries either have, demonstrated their political commitment to ending
or are working on, national action plans to end child it. The resolution highlights the urgent need
marriage. Girls’ education is a consistent protective to reach the poorest and most marginalized girls
factor against child marriage, with child marriage rates and women—while calling upon the international
among girls who complete secondary school 66 per community to increase its efforts to end child,
cent lower than among girls with no education, and 80 early and forced marriage. It recognizes how global
per cent lower among those who complete higher health threats, climate change, conflicts and forced
education. COVID-19 increased the number of school displacement can have a particularly negative
dropouts, thereby increasing the risk that girls who are impact on women and girls and which, by extension,
out of school will not return. Girls who drop out of can also increase child, early and forced marriage.
school are significantly more likely marry early, and 87 The resolution appreciates the UNFPA-UNICEF
per cent of married adolescent girls are out of school. Global Programme to End Child Marriage and other
1 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-seventh Session, Third Committee agenda item 64(a) (A/C.3/77/L.19/Rev.1)
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES zambia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 154
95,000
risk reduction. This session, “No Time to Lose: Child
Marriage and the Triple Crisis”, enabled United
Nations Member States and other stakeholders adolescent
to improve their collective understanding girls participated in life-skills
of the effects of the triple crisis on child marriage, or CSE in programme areas.
and what could be done in response.
1 MILLION
in 2018, compared with 47 per cent and 9 per cent,
respectively, in 1993. However, this rate of progress
will not be enough to eliminate child marriage
by 2030 as set out in the SDGs. If the progress individuals (boys, girls, women and
over the past decade continues at the same rate,
men) were reached by traditional and
child marriage prevalence will still be at 22 per cent
social media messaging on child
by 2030, and at 16 per cent even if the rate doubles.
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls
and gender equality.
More than
17,000 individuals
(boys, girls, women and men) partici-
pated in group education or dialogue
sessions on consequences of and
alternatives to child marriage, the
rights of adolescent girls and gender
equality.
Indicator 1111: Number of adolescent girls (aged 10–19) who actively participated in life-
18,120 94,616
skills or CSE interventions in programme areas
Indicator 1121: Number of girls (aged 10–19) supported by the programme to enrol and/or
6,489 10,713
remain in primary or secondary school
Indicator 1211: Number of boys and men actively participating in group education/
15,450 17,450
dialogues that address harmful masculinities and gender norms
Indicator 1221: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) who participate
in group education/dialogue sessions on consequences of and alternatives to child 53,215 11,234
marriage, the rights of adolescent girls and gender equality
Indicator 1222: Number of individuals (boys, girls, women and men) reached by mass
media (traditional and social media) messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent 960,000 1,032,860
girls and gender equality
Indicator 1223: Number of local actors (e.g., traditional, religious and community leaders)
1,500 6,140
with meaningful participation in dialogues and consensus-building to end child marriage
Indicator 1231: Number of CSOs newly mobilized in support of challenging social norms
12 2
and promoting gender equality by the Global Programme (cumulative)
Indicator 2121: Number of primary/secondary/non-formal schools in programme areas
50 189
providing quality gender-friendly education that meets minimum standards
Indicator 2131: Number of service delivery points in programme areas providing quality
adolescent-responsive services (health, child protection/ gender-based violence) that meet 621 1,279
minimum standards
Indicator 2211: Number of partnerships (both formal and informal) established to deliver
adolescent-responsive social protection, poverty reduction and economic empowerment 2 2
programmes and services
Indicator 3111: Number of policies or legal instruments addressing child marriage drafted,
proposed or adopted at national and subnational level with Global Programme support 5 5
(cumulative)
Indicator 3121: Number of subnational plans with evidence informed interventions
6 6
to address child marriage
Indicator 3211: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that focus on what works
3 1
to end child marriage (cumulative)
Indicator 3212: Number of generated evidence and knowledge that apply a gender analysis
3 1
(cumulative)
Indicator 3221: Number of south-to-south cooperation events (conferences, expert visits,
1 8
peer consultations, study tours, communities of practice) supported
Providing intensive support and health, and traditional village registers. Variables
to marginalized girls considered included the rate of child marriage
and teen pregnancy and transition levels from primary
to secondary education. Safe space models were
In 2022, the Global Programme was expanded from used to deliver the programme to girls and boys.
the two pilot districts of Katete and Senanga to include Guidance and counselling teachers were trained
four districts in the western and eastern provinces, to deliver targeted SRH information for adolescent
namely Lundazi, Chama, Sesheke and Mwandi, girls and boys at risk of child marriage. Schools’ life-
with a focus on reaching the most vulnerable skills curriculums were also strengthened, to focus
and marginalized adolescent girls, boys and their on puberty, HIV prevention, gender equality, sexual
families. The new districts were selected based on data and reproductive health, relationships and human
from the Zambia Demographic and Health Survey rights. The overall goal for both the safe spaces
(ZDHS) 2018, district administrative data on education and the interventions providing life-skills in schools
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES zambia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 156
“ I have learned how to communicate — Judith Zimba, District Guidance and Counselling
Coordinator for Lundazi district
with my parents and friends, as well
how to prevent myself from unwanted
pregnancy, before I joined safe spaces,
I was not able to share personal A combination of strategies and approaches are used
information especially about my sexuality. to ensure and accelerate learning for girls, including
After hearing my friends’ experiences, bursaries, transportation, alternative community
I can ask for advice without the fear education and digital learning. The support for girls’
of being laughed at and criticized.” formal and informal education is also supported
by community case management for early
— Dorica Phiri of Katete identification and referral to education for girls who are
out of school, safe spaces where CSE is provided,
guidance and counselling services, access to career
Additionally, 178 guidance and counselling teachers clubs and support for menstrual hygiene management.
were trained in providing comprehensive sexual
education to adolescent girls and boys in schools, Through the programme, 10,713 adolescent girls
and on school-related GBV/child safeguarding. were enrolled in formal and informal education
This enabled the teachers to disseminate age- and helped to stay there. Of these girls, 3,748
appropriate SRH information to adolescent girls in Katete and Senanga transitioned from primary
and boys in 189 schools in the six programme target to secondary education. Another 1,279 girls aged
districts. They reached a total of 10,458 girls. 10–19 years were identified through community
2.0 MILLION
married
before age 18
Enhancing the family The Coaching Boys into Men (CBIM) initiative used
and community environment football to educate and raise awareness among
adolescent boys and young men aged 10–24 years
on issues surrounding sexual and reproductive health
© UNICEF/UN0640374/Siakachoma
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES zambia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 159
and girls deserve equal respect. I still see a big number discussion for female community members in Liangati
of friends that still do not respect girls. I want to be ward, Senanga district, said: “discussions with
engaging them so that they too can do like I do.” parents and children on ending child marriage
have been taking place in the community. People’s
Another graduate of CBIM, Jonah Lui-Namabunga perceptions and attitudes towards child marriage
from Namabunga Secondary School of Lipuwe have tremendously changed. Most parents are now
ward participated in all 12 and said, “Under CBIM, more willing to keeping their children in school
I learned of the respect that I need to accord than forcing them into early-marriage.“
the females in our communities. I learned that I should
not be using insulting language to females. I have
learned that I should desist from marrying early.” Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
“My name is Laitani Phiri, I am 39 years old. I come Responsibilities for household chores such as cattle
from Kafuma village, a coach in Kasambandola herding or farming are keeping boys and young
ward, Kambila CWAC. After getting trained in CBIM men away from participating in CBIM sessions. Boys’
in 2021 with support from UNICEF, in 2022, I recruited parents have not been made aware of the CBIM
25 boys aged between 9–14 and 25 boys aged 15–18. interventions that the boys participate in, which most
Out of the 50 boys, 45 boys successfully graduated of the time affects the boys’ participation as parents
in all the 12 sessions. My experience coaching consider it as a waste of time or think that their boys
the boys into men was rewarding. From my group, are just playing football. As a result, the chores take
13 boys went back to school; all are at Kambila precedence and boys are not allowed to participate
primary school. There have been some notable as per the schedule. There is also inadequate follow-
changes in the boys because 10 boys, who are up support for the boys that have graduated from
about 17 years old, have delayed marrying, while the CBIM sessions with other gender-transformative
other changes include respect for female teachers and alternative empowerment programmes
and participating in chores in their homes.” to ensure that they transition as they delay marriage
and implement the commitment from the knowledge
“My name is Petersen Banda, I am 17 years old from and information acquired during the 12 CBIM sessions.
Chinziri village. I was recruited into CBIM in 2022.
I am in Grade 5 at Kambila Primary school. The group
has helped me to stay in school and also to show Strengthening systems
respect to women and girls. I equally participate
in chores at home that are perceived to be female
chores. Apart from that, I also educate my friends
even though others receive the information with
mixed feelings since they think we are peers,
“ I think addressing gender dynamics
that perpetuate gender violence
will make schools safer and improve
while others learn and change their attitude the educational experience for all.”
towards women and girls. If I was not attending
the sessions, probably by this time I would have — Doreen Phiri, District Guidance and Counselling
Coordinator for Katete District
stopped school and even have got married.”
The programme continued to strengthen formal The programme trained 50 staff in 35 health
(primary and secondary) and non-formal schools facilities to conduct school-based outreach
to provide good quality, gender-responsive services, delivering gender-transformative life-
education for adolescent girls, including CSE. Some skills and SRH to 40,163 adolescent girls and boys,
391 teachers (154 female and 237 male) were trained building their knowledge, skills and awareness
on giving personal, social, educational and vocational on their rights, and connecting them to services.
guidance and counselling services with the aim
of keeping adolescent girls and boys in school. In turn,
the teachers reached a total of 54,410 adolescents Challenges, lessons learned and next steps
(31,988 girls and 23,422 boys) in 189 schools.
Health facility outreach activities to schools
and communities are being used to increase
The public policy maturity model The model is structured around six intermediate
outcomes and different subdomains that
Elimination of harmful practices such as child are defined by distinct levels of maturity i.e.,
marriage requires the integration of strategic weak-building; average-enhancing; good-
approaches, processes, systems and information. integrating; and excellent-mature (see Figure 4).
UNFPA and UNICEF recognize the role national
action plans play in strengthening policy coherence TABLE 2: Snippet of the policy maturity model
to achieve this. Lessons from the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development peer Intermediate
Sub-Domains Score
review process emphasize that the plans need: Outcome
© UNICEF/UN0353982/Siakachoma/OutSet Media
F3: Research and surveys —-
2022 COUNTRY PROFILES zambia UNFPA–UNICEF Global programme to End Child Marriage 163
The benchmarks for each level of maturity have been and disburse the expenditure on behalf of the other
defined and require certain priorities, processes, sectors, with health and education submitting requests
and results to be achieved for each subdomain, for funding based on activities on the joint workplan.
and can be contextualized by country. Feedback from
the testing emphasized the role of the model as:
Generating and applying data
• a useful advocacy tool and evidence
• something that builds Government
accountability and action towards The Global Programme provided capacity-
elimination of harmful practices
building and technical support for the Zambia
• a tool to review and track the implementation Institute for Policy Analysis and Research
of a national action plan. (ZIPAR) in order to generate and use evidence
on what works to end child marriage. UNICEF
and UNFPA helped ZIPAR in the design
On average, overall country ratings on a 4-point scale and implementation of data-collection (questionnaire
ranged from 1.8 (weak-building in Bangladesh) to 3.0 and instrument design, training and ethics protocols,
(good-integrating in Zambia). Financing and human and fieldwork protocol) and data analysis (including
resources (rating 1.3) emerged as the area where methodology and interpretation of results).
countries were rated the least, while governance
and coordination (rating 2.7) were rated highly. Preliminary analysis revealed several outcomes.
Access
• Community members increasingly support
Engagement
to Services and Participation girls’ education as they believe it reduces
child marriages and teenage pregnancies.
• Community members also believed that
Financing
a family’s future is made more secure
and HR by educating a girl, as girls always
remember to look after their families.