Men and Boys

How to Treat a Woman: Sachin Shows the Way

Mon, 02/22/2010
The Times of India

Want to play like Sachin Tendulkar on the field? First, behave like him off it. With domestic violence becoming a serious problem in India — one in three married women reporting some form of abuse — around 25 cricket coaches in Mumbai are now being trained to teach their players how to behave with a woman.

Initiated by the International Centre for Research on Women (ICRW), in collaboration with Family Violence Prevention Fund (FVPF) and Mumbai School Sports Association (MSSA), project 'Parivartan' hopes to use India's most popular sport to curb domestic violence.

Improving the Reproductive Health of Married and Unmarried Youth in India

Improving the Reproductive Health of Married and Unmarried Youth in India

Rohini Pande; Kathleen Kurz; Sunayana Walia; Kerry MacQuarrie; Saranga Jain
2006

Decision makers want to know which strategies are most cost-effective for improving adolescent reproductive health and what resources are required to implement or scale up successful programs. Yet little is known about these programs' costs, and few researchers are building cost-analysis into their program designs. This report summarizes the results of a multi-partner study of youth reproductive health interventions in rural and urban areas of India from 1996 to 2006. The research program demonstrated that it is possible to create effective programs to improve adolescents' health in a relatively short time. This report draws on lessons learned on how to strengthen community and government efforts to improve youth reproductive and sexual health.

An accompanying briefing kit provides short summaries of specific projects and outcomes.

Download the briefing kit by section:

Reproductive Health: Evidence from Three Adolescent Reproductive Health Programs in India
Understanding Costs to Improve Youth Reproductive and Sexual Health: Results from a Study in Rural Maharashtra, India

Understanding Costs to Improve Youth Reproductive and Sexual Health: Results from a Study in Rural Tamil Nadu

Understanding Costs to Improve Youth Reproductive and Sexual Health: Evidence on Replicating a Tested Model in Delhi, India

Influence of Men and Boys on Youth Reproductive and Sexual Health: Lessons from Intervention Studies in India

Influence of Men and Boys on Youth Reproductive and Sexual Health: Husbands' Involvement in Maternal Care in Rural Maharashtra, India

Community Mobilization and Youth Reproductive and Sexual Health: Findings from Intervention Studies in India

Addressing Gender-Based Constraints in Youth Reproductive Health: Findings from Intervention Studies in India

Addressing Gender-Based Constraints in Youth Reproductive Health: Experiences and Behaviors about Infertility among Young Couples in Rural Maharashtra, India

Delaying Age at Marriage in Rural Maharashtra, India

Reducing Anemia and Changing Dietary Behaviors among Adolescent Girls in Maharashtra, India

Building Life Skills to Improve Adolescent Girls' Reproductive and Sexual health, Tigri, Delhi

Replicating an Adolescent Girls' Reproductive and Sexual Health Program in Naglamachi, Delhi

Reproductive and Sexual Health Education, Care and Counseling for Married Adolescents in Rural Maharashtra, India

Reducing Reproductive Tract Infections among Married Youth in Rural Tamil Nadu, India
Role of Mothers-in-Law in Young Women's Reproductive Health: Evidence from Intervention Research in Rural Maharashtra, India

Social Mobilization or Government Services: What Influences Married Adolescents' Reproductive Health in Rural Maharashtra, India?

Download the full research report:

(758.63 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Exploring Dimensions of Masculinity and Violence

Exploring Dimensions of Masculinity and Violence

Anne Eckman, Aparna Jain, Sarah Degnan Kambou, Doris Bartel, John Crownover
2007

Working toward the reduction and elimination of gender-based violence, ICRW partnered with CARE Balkans and CARE International to implement a groundbreaking program working directly with young men between the ages of 13 and 19 to deconstruct masculinity in their cultures and determine how gender norms and male socialization lead to inequitable attitudes and behaviors toward women and girls.

(1.88 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Engaging Men and Boys to Achieve Gender Equality

Engaging Men and Boys to Achieve Gender Equality
How Can We Build on What We Have Learned?

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2007

ICRW and Instituto Promundo organized a seminar entitled "Engaging Men and Boys in HIV/AIDS Prevention, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Ending Gender-Based Violence: How Can We Build on What We Have Learned?" to examine the current state of work with men and boys in the field of health care, especially reproductive and sexual health. This report summarizes the seminar.

(2.14 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Men and Gender Equality Policy Project

The Men and Gender Equality Policy Project (MGEPP), coordinated by ICRW and Instituto Promundo, was a multiyear effort to build the evidence base on how to change public institutions and policies to better foster gender equality and to raise awareness among policymakers and program planners of the need to involve men in health, development and gender equality issues.

Project activities include:

Countries that participated in the project include Brazil, Chile, Croatia, India, Mexico, Rwanda, South Africa and Tanzania.

The project's multiple research components provided policymakers with practical strategies for engaging men in relevant policy areas, particularly in the areas of sexual and reproductive health, gender-based violence, fatherhood, maternal and child health, and men's health needs.

Duration: 
2007 - 2011
Location(s): 
Brazil
Location(s): 
Chile
Location(s): 
Croatia
Location(s): 
India
Location(s): 
Mexico
Location(s): 
South Africa
Location(s): 
Tanzania
Location(s): 
Rwanda
Related Publications: 

Parivartan: Coaching Boys Into Men

The Parivartan program aims to reduce gender-based violence by working with men and boys through India’s popular sport of cricket. The program was based on Coaching Boys Into Men (CBIM), an initiative of the United States (US)-based Futures Without Violence (formerly Family Violence Prevention Fund) that engages coaches as positive role models and trains them to deliver messages to their male athletes about the importance of respecting women and understanding that violence never equals strength. Based on lessons from implementation of CBIM in the US, the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) developed and piloted an India-specific, cricket-based adaptation of the program: "Parivartan", which means transformation. The Mumbai-based program engaged cricket coaches and mentors in schools and the community to:

  • Raise awareness about abusive and disrespectful behavior;
  • Promote gender-equitable, non-violent attitudes; and
  • Teach skills to speak up and intervene when witnessing harmful and disrespectful behaviors.

Findings from the study have been very encouraging—they have demonstrated a distinct positive shift in the attitudes of athletes as well as coaches and mentors towards gender equity and violence against women. Alongside the change in attitudes, there is a promising indication of behavioral change as well; however to sustain and amplify the translation of attitudinal change into behavioral change, a sustained long-term investment in the Parivartan program is an imperative. 

Duration: 
2008 - 2012
Location(s): 
India

Ravi Verma

Ravi Verma
Ravi
Verma
Regional Director, Asia Regional Office
Bio: 

Ravi Verma is regional director for the International Center for Research on Women's (ICRW) Asia Regional Office in New Delhi, India. In this role, Verma leads ICRW’s local and regional efforts to conduct research, provide technical support, build capacity and partake in policy dialogue on an array of issues, including adolescent girls, reproductive health, HIV/AIDS, gender-based violence, engaging men and boys and economic development.

Verma brings more than 25 years of programmatic research experience in reproductive health, gender mainstreaming and HIV in South Asia. Prior to joining ICRW in 2007, he was a program associate with Population Council/Horizons, where he collaborated with partners to design, implement and evaluate innovative operations research projects on gender and HIV. For more than 20 years, he was a professor in the department of population policies and programs at the International Institute for Population Sciences in Mumbai, India. While there, Verma managed multi-faceted, collaborative intervention research projects and conducted national studies on reproductive health, fertility, family planning and sexual behaviors.

Expertise: 

HIV and AIDS, Engaging Men and Boys, Population and Reproductive Health, Violence Against Women

Languages Spoken: 

English, Hindi, Marathi

Education: 

Verma holds a doctorate in social sciences from the Indian Institute of Technology and a master's in psychology from the University of Allahabad in India.

My GEMS Diary

My GEMS Diary

ICRW, Committee of Resource Organizations for Literacy (CORO), and the Tata Institute for Social Sciences (TISS)
2009

The Gender Equity Movement in Schools (GEMS) program uses a school-based curriculum to develop gender-equitable norms among adolescents. This diary is an interactive workbook geared toward school-age children (ages 12-14). It includes exercises and games that acknowledge gender differences and encourage equal relationships. 

In Hindi

(3.19 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

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