Child Marriage

Capitol Hill Events Focus on Teen Girls, Forced Child Marriage

ICRW Expert Testifies Before U.S Human Rights Commission
Wed, 07/14/2010

WASHINGTON D.C. – The International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) during two Capitol Hill events on Thursday, July 15, will address the lives of adolescent girls and the issue of forced child marriage.

Child brides remain prevalent in many developing countries, where girls have a one in seven chance of marrying before their 15th birthday. Forced child marriage erodes girls’ health and social well-being, and undermines global development efforts. The International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act – which enjoys unprecedented bipartisan support – is a starting point for how to end this practice.

Anju Malhotra, ICRW’s vice president of research, innovation and impact, will testify at 1:30 p.m. before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission about the causes, consequences and potential solutions to forced child marriage. The hearing is scheduled to take place in Rayburn House Office Building, Room 2226.

Then at 5 p.m., ICRW, along with the Coalition for Adolescent Girls, CARE and the International Women’s Health Coalition, will host a reception to celebrate the launch of the report, “Girls Speak: A New Voice in Global Development.” The report draws together girls’ voices and their ideas for how to improve their lives. Congresswoman Betty McCollum (D-MN) and ICRW President Sarah Degnan Kambou, among others, will speak. The reception also will take place in Rayburn, Room B-369.

More information on child marriage »

Media Contact: 
Jeannie Bunton, 202.742.1316, Jbunton@icrw.org
Mission Statement: 

ICRW's mission is to empower women, advance gender equality and fight poverty in the developing world. To accomplish this, ICRW works with partners to conduct empirical research, build capacity and advocate for evidence-based, practical ways to change policies and programs.

Wedded to School

Young Archana Hajare is Hitting the Books, Not Cooking for a Husband
Wed, 07/07/2010

Indian girl who convinced her parents not to marry her when she was a teenager is now pursuing a career as an educator.

Indian girl who convinced her parents not to marry her when she was a teenager is now pursuing a career as an educator. 


VILLAGE OF DADEGAON, India – Archana Hajare had made her decision, and her parents agreed to let her go. She was nervous, but she knew she had to see this through.

 Archana Hajare

            Archana Hajare

One of her first steps required traveling with her father to a city nearly 150 miles from their village. Once they arrived, Archana would have an interview to consider her admittance to a special training center for prospective teachers.

“My father couldn’t sleep for three nights,” Archana says, “with the thought of whether he should send his daughter off for an education.”

That’s because where Archana is from, most parents traditionally married off their daughters when they were, on average, 16 years old. That doesn’t happen as much these days. Thanks to a decade-long effort by the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and its partner, the Institute for Health Management, Pachod (IHMP), many girls in this rural area of some 50 villages are delaying marriage until they’re 17 or older.

Now, more girls remain wedded to their studies and to enjoying their girlhood.

By waiting longer to marry and have children, girls here also are more likely to work outside of the home. They reduce their chances of suffering the medical and emotional risks of giving birth before their bodies and minds are fully ready. And they’re less likely to be exposed to HIV – a common risk of child brides who tend to marry older men who have had sexual partners.

Archana, now 20, is one such success story.

She is from the village of Dadegaon, one of many rural villages in the Aurangabad district of the Indian state of Maharashtra. Here, families earn their living from the land, mainly growing sorghum, millet, sweet limes and cotton. In the height of summer, many fields are dry and brown, save for an occasional splash of color from the saris worn by working women, or from a tiny teal, salmon or yellow Hindu temple rising up from a hillside.

Archana is the third of four siblings in a family that has lived in Dadegaon for 10 generations.

 

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From timid to confident

A somewhat shy girl, Archana says she hardly used to talk to others and sometimes battled with her brothers and sisters. Then in the 7th grade she took part in a year-long IHMP program focusing on life skills, which ICRW evaluated. For an hour every weekday evening, she learned about a variety of topics, from making decisions and managing her time to personal hygiene, reproductive health and nutrition. Social workers met with her parents, too, to talk about what Archana was learning and how to support her.

Archana says the experience helped her become more confident and learn how to communicate better with others, including girls her age.

Two years after finishing the program, Archana’s 9th grade teacher asked the class what they wanted to do when they grew up. Archana spoke up. “I just gathered the courage,” she says, “and (told) the teacher that I want to go for teacher’s training.”

Then in 12th grade, Archana’s teacher encouraged her to apply to the special training center. It was at that time, too, that Archana’s parents talked to her about marriage. She was 18, and they had chosen her cousin – an engineer eight years her senior – to be her husband.

Archana’s parents felt it best that her future husband belong to their extended family to ensure that she’d be treated well by her mother-in-law, who is her aunt. (Once Indian girls marry, they traditionally leave their families to live with their in-laws.)

Despite her parents’ best intentions, Archana told them she wanted to apply to the training center. She convinced them to let her pursue her dream.

“If my daughter has this intense desire to continue her education and be a teacher, then why should I not support her?” says Archana’s father, Kalyanrao Hajare, as he sits on the floor of their home, drinking tea.

“It’s better that I give her a pen in her hand, than a sickle.”

Kalyanrao’s support of Archana’s wishes is uncommon, according to Sunayana Walia, an ICRW senior reproductive health specialist who worked on the program in which Archana participated. However, families that stand by their daughters are less likely to be criticized or ostracized by their community for going against traditional practices, she says.

“It’s very heartening to see fundamental changes in parents who are supportive of their daughters,” Walia says. “Archana and her parents are creating a quiet revolution at the grassroots level that is slowly changing young girls’ lives to lives where they live by their own choices and decisions.”

 Archana’s father, Kalyanrao Hajare
 Archana’s father, Kalyanrao Hajare

A father's support

The trip that Kalyanrao and Archana took for the initial interview at the center was successful. But still concerned about his decision to let her go, Kalyanrao had a long conversation with the center’s principal. She assured him that she would look out for his Archana.

Today, Archana is in her final year of the two-year training program. She lives away from home and rents a room with two other girls near the center. When she comes home to her village for vacation – as she was recently – she says she feels somewhat disconnected with some of her childhood girl friends. Many of them already are married with children.

“When we sit around, they talk about their own families,” Archana says. “But I have something different to talk about, so I look for girls who are educated.”

These days, she’s focused on preparing for an exam in August that will help her earn her teacher’s training diploma next year. While in that program, Archana also is taking distance learning courses for a bachelor’s degree in Marathi literature; Marathi is the official language of Maharashtra.

Ultimately, she says she’d like to become an administrator in the state education system.

And what about marriage to her cousin or someone else?

“Once I start working, I will decide,” Archana says as her father looks on. “Even if I get married, I’d like to keep my parents with me.”

Her father chuckles at the notion.

“Does that happen in our society?” he says.

Maybe this time around, it will.

Gillian Gaynair is ICRW's writer/editor.

Improving the Well-Being of Married Adolescent Girls in Ethiopia

In Ethiopia’s Amhara region, almost half of all girls are married by the age of 15. By the time they turn 18, nearly three out of four girls are married. Early marriage presents many health risks for these girls that are compounded by their lack of economic autonomy.

To address this vulnerability, ICRW is working with CARE Ethiopia to improve the sexual and reproductive health and economic well-being of adolescent girls by combining health programs with economic empowerment interventions to reach 5,000 married girls in Amhara.

ICRW is evaluating the intervention by comparing an implementation model that combines both reproductive health and economic empowerment training to models that provide each in isolation and against a comparison group receiving no programming. The goal is to better understand the potential synergies between health and economic interventions and outcomes. The core indicators being examined include changes in girls’ sexual and reproductive health, such as their use of contraceptives, and changes in their economic independence, such as whether they use savings accounts. Through exploring these questions, the project aims to offer tested best practices to apply in future programs for girls.

Duration: 
2009 - 2013
Location(s): 
Ethiopia

Toronto Hosts G(irls)20 Summit

Education a Key for Girls in Developing World
Wed, 06/16/2010
Inside Toronto

ICRW President Sarah Degnan Kambou, a panelist during the opening ceremonies of the first-ever G(irls)20 Summit, discusses the dire consequences of child marriage and the need for all governments to invest in girls' education. The summit brought together one girl from each of the G20 member countries on June 15 to 18 to discuss how girls and women can help solve some of the world’s greatest challenges. Modeled after the G20, the inaugural G(irls)20 Summit was spearheaded by Canada's Belinda Stronach Foundation.

Preventing Child Marriage

ICRW is a leader among organizations advocating for the United States to become more involved in curbing child marriage. ICRW is working with the U.S. Congress and the administration to raise the profile of this issue and bring more national and international support to end this harmful traditional practice.

Commentary: Women Are the Epicenter of Haiti’s Renewal

Rebuilding Efforts Should Focus on Women to Make a Difference
Thu, 04/01/2010

For Haiti to recover from the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake, for it to reinvent itself and reposition itself regionally, more than new buildings need to rise. The island nation requires a new social foundation. International donors gathering in New York on March 31 to discuss innovative ideas for Haiti’s future will do well to recognize that their efforts will go farther, faster if women are the center of Haiti’s renewal. 

For Haiti to recover from the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake, for it to reinvent itself and reposition itself regionally, more than new buildings need to rise. The island nation requires a new social foundation. International donors gathering in New York on March 31 to discuss innovative ideas for Haiti’s future will do well to recognize that their efforts will go farther, faster if women are the center of Haiti’s renewal.  

Every nation’s greatest asset is its people, and in Haiti, women’s activities – such as farming and commerce – make up more than three-quarters of the country’s informal economy. That’s significant, because in Haiti, the poorer the household, the more dependent it is on revenue generated by women, regardless of whether that household is headed by a man or a woman.  

Yet despite women’s contributions and strong presence – they are more than half of Haiti’s population – the inequities of Haitian society remain extreme.  Almost 60 percent of Haitian women cannot read or write. Early marriage is common, with 24 percent of girls wedded before the age of 18. Haiti’s fertility rate is the highest in the region, and its maternal mortality rate leads, too, with 670 deaths for every 100,000 children born. Haiti also holds the region’s highest rates of violence against women, which is among the highest in the world.

This was the landscape before the earth shook.

Now, Haiti has the opportunity to reverse inequities, and build a better nation for all of its citizens. It will require creating targeted opportunities for women to participate fully in Haitian society, and have a meaningful role in what stands to be a decades-long reconstruction of their country. But Haiti’s women cannot contribute wholly if they’re not educated and healthy and if they can’t give birth safely or stay free of violence. With that, it’s imperative that the international community make committed investments in Haitian women as central actors in every phase of Haiti’s recovery. Indeed, research conducted during the past 30 years demonstrates that women can play a critical part in social and economic development when they have access to economic resources – such as the right to earn a living, access to credit or the ability to own land; when their education levels rise and their nutrition and health improves; and when the threat of domestic violence diminishes.  When these types of conditions are met, women are better positioned to make a difference.

Given the evidence, it’s critical that officials make Haitian women an integral part of their discussions at the United Nations’ international donors’ conference about Haiti’s future. A call to do this already exists in the Millennium Development Goals and was reiterated earlier this month when the UN convened its 54th Commission on the Status of Women.

What’s more, there are models of practical approaches for creating more equitable societies in developing countries like Haiti. Rwanda is just one example of a country that did it right by using reconstruction as an opportunity to promote gender equality. How? Following the genocide of 1994, Rwanda created one of the world’s most gender equitable constitutions, with mechanisms to support women’s rights at the local, regional and national levels. Lawmakers endorsed legislation and made commitments to end violence against women.

Today, 56 percent of the country’s parliament members are women – the highest representation of female elected officials in the world. Rwanda also created a monitoring body called the Gender Observatory that ensures that equality between women and men is upheld in government at all levels. With a commitment to advancing women’s educational and business skills, Rwanda’s economy has stabilized to what it was before the genocide. In 2008, the country even registered record-high economic growth of 11 percent.

Haiti, too, could experience similar outcomes.

Rebuilding its society without leaving half its people behind – women – but rather, working in partnership with them, can help Haiti have a better chance of emerging from the rubble with a stronger foundation for its renewal.
 



Sarah Degnan Kambou is chief operating officer of the International Center for Research on Women in Washington, D.C. A globally recognized expert in gender relations, she focuses on issues related to health and development. Degnan Kambou holds a doctorate in international health policy and a master’s in public health from Boston University.

Mothers Of Ethiopia Part II: Escaping Child Marriage

Mon, 11/30/2009
The Huffington Post

The first time Tadu Gelana's mother suggested she get married, Tadu thought she was kidding. Only 14 years old, Tadu had not yet finished school or had her first menstruation cycle. Tadu laughed at the suggestion. The second time her mother mentioned it, Tadu told her she wasn't interested.

Her mother did not relent.

Tadu's brother, who was about twice her age and had taken care of her for many years, had recently passed away. Tadu felt she should be grieving for the loss of her big brother, not preparing for a joyous wedding ceremony.

New Insights on Preventing Child Marriage

New Insights on Preventing Child Marriage

Saranga Jain, Kathleen Kurz
2007

What factors are associated with the risk of or protection from child marriage? What are the current programmatic approaches to prevent child marriage in developing countries, and are these programs effective? This report for policymakers and development practitioners aims to answer these critical questions. New insights on risk and protective factors will help program designers find points of intervention to prevent child marriage. The program scan offers a better understanding of what programs currently exist and how to expand efforts.

Related:
Program Scan Matrix on Child Marriage

(1.24 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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Trade Liberalization & Effects on Marriage: Case Studies from Bangladesh, Vietnam and Egypt

Trade Liberalization & Effects on Marriage: Case Studies from Bangladesh, Vietnam and Egypt

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2009

Economic growth and trade liberalization can transform the institution of marriage by increasing employment opportunities for women. Marriage, especially early marriage of adolescent girls, may become less economically essential as young women become financially independent. The case studies presented in this paper show, culture mediates the impact of economic change on marriage differently in different contexts, thus prohibiting any generalizations about trade liberalization and marriage. As countries implement liberal trade policies, or otherwise alter these regimes, it is crucial that scholars, activists and policymakers are aware of the potential divergent socioeconomic effects that could result, both those intended and unintended.

(1.53 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 »

Too Young to Wed

Too Young to Wed
the Lives, Rights and Health of Young Married Girls

Sanyukta Mathur, Margaret Greene, Anju Malhotra
2003

Millions of young girls in the developing world are married when they are still children, and as a result are denied the ordinary experiences that young people elsewhere take for granted: schooling, good health, economic opportunities, and friendship with peers. Despite national laws and international agreements forbidding child marriage, gender roles and marriage systems in many countries dictate the practice, through which girls are deprived of basic rights and subjected to discrimination and health risks. This position paper outlines the causes and consequences of child marriage, as well as policy and programmatic responses to early marriage.

(821.53 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.

Terms and Conditions »

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