Breaking The Vows
Breaking The Vows
Breaking The Vows
Breaking Vows:
My father made the decision to marry me off and I was not given any say at all. In fact, I did not even know about my marriage. It wasnt until a woman came to my home, giving me money and a dress, and said, you are now my daughter, that I realised what was happening. I was shocked, but my sisters advised me to stay silent.
Sabina, Pakistan1
I was so sad when my friend Limya who was studying seventh grade was suddenly married. She cried a lot. Though her parents promised her that she could continue her studies after marriage, it did not happen. There are many girls in my area who drop out from school due to early marriage.
Noha, 16, Sudan2
I was forced to leave school in order to get married. I was very young then. I was divorced after eight months of my marriage. I wish other girls dont suffer like me.
Madina, 14, Sudan3
Plan UKs Because I am a Girl campaign aims to ensure millions more girls in the worlds poorest countries can access a quality education. An education that will contribute towards breaking the cycle of poverty for generations to come.
Authors: Juliette Myers and Rowan Harvey Researchers: Alana Livesey and Allison Wong Plan UK would like to thank: Kanwal Ahluwalia, Ruth Naylor, Aoife NicCharthaigh, Michael ODonnell, Keshet Bachan, Naomi Williams, Adam Short, Gari Donn, Julia Lallah-Mahara, Ruthie Taylor, Wiktoria Obidniak and Ceri Hayes. Cover photo: Mads Nissen
Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Contents
Foreword 1. Executive summary 2. Early and forced marriage: causes and consequences 3. Education and early and forced marriage 4. The global impact of early and forced marriage 5. International human rights standards and early and forced marriage 6. The role of the UK Government in ending early and forced marriage Endnotes 3 4 6 13 18 27 28 34
Plan works around the world to reduce rates of early and forced marriage and increase girls access to their rights. Our aims are:
To reduce the social pressure that motivates families to favour early marriage by working with boys, girls, men, women and their communities to change attitudes, beliefs and behaviours about the practice. To provide educational opportunities for all girls through formal schooling and alternative or vocational training. To build girls leadership skills through empowerment and building of socio-economic capabilities as well as to facilitate the creation of social networks for girls and increase their participation in political and civic action. To train and support community leaders and organisations to design and carry out advocacy and awareness activities that promote and protect the rights of girls.
Forced because girls rarely give their free and full consent to marry
The 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that marriage should be entered only with the free and full consent of the intending spouses. In the majority of child marriages, however, there is often an element of coercion involved: parents, guardians or families put pressure on children or force them into marriage. Early marriage is accepted as the norm in many countries and girls may give their consent as a duty and sign of respect to their family and community. However, where one of the parties in a marriage is under the age of 18 years old, consent cannot always be assumed to be free and full and is rarely in the best interest of the girl.
Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
In the time it takes to read this foreword, 40* girls under the age of 18 in some of the poorest countries in the world will have been coaxed, coerced, or forced into getting married.
Foreword
This report explores the issues behind the ten million girls a year who experience early or forced marriage. Married young, girls are frequently taken out of school, are at a higher risk of HIV infection, early pregnancy and health conditions such as obstetric fistula. If she survives childbirth her children are less likely to grow up healthy and go to school, continuing the cycle of poverty for generations to come. Why is the international community so silent when one out of every seven girls in the worlds poorest countries is married before their fifteenth birthday? This is an abuse of human rights that ignores their best interests, their views and undermines efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Child marriage is a practice imbedded in many cultures and traditions, is exacerbated by poverty and too often increases after natural disasters and emergencies. For the girl it is a rapid transition from childhood that too often harms her education and health. Early and forced marriage harms boys too, albeit on a much smaller scale. But tackling the causes of early and forced marriage can and must succeed. Just as child marriage crosses cultures, so must those working to end it span religions and traditions. We welcome the move by The Elders group of eminent global leaders to form an alliance against early marriage and this report gives many success stories; from Bangladesh where the friends of fifteen year old Samina successfully lobbied their union council to stop her wedding and return her to school; to the Imams of Egypt and the Mayan workers in Guatemala who with Plan support are persuading their communities to value a girls right to an education and the opportunities that it brings; to Jasvinder Sanghera who has used her childhood experience of forced marriage to campaign against its practice in the UK. Building on this work we outline in this report what more can be done by the British government to strengthen its role in preventing early and forced marriage and supporting those who have fled or survived it. Plan UK is committed to raising the voices of the millions of girls married young against their will. We ask you to support these girls and join the growing number of campaigners against early marriage across the world.
For more information and to join Plan UKs Because I Am a Girl campaign, visit our website at www.becauseiamagirl.org
1 Executive Summary
10 million girls under the age of 18 marry each year.5 Thats around 833,333 a month 192,307 a week 27,397 a day 19 every minute Or, around one girl every three seconds.
One in every three girls in the developing world is married by the age of 18.6 One in seven marries before they reach the age of 15.7 In countries like Niger, Chad, Mali, Bangladesh, Guinea and the Central African Republic (CAR), the rate of early and forced marriage is 60 per cent and over. It is particularly high in South Asia (46 per cent) and in sub-Saharan Africa (38 per cent).8 Early and forced marriage is most prevalent where poverty, birth and death rates are high, there is greater incidence of conflict and civil strife and lower levels of overall development, including schooling, employment and healthcare.9 Although the average age at first marriage is gradually increasing worldwide, the pace of change is slow. In Nepal, Guinea and Bangladesh, for instance, the average age at first marriage for girls still remains below 18.10 Early and forced marriage discriminates against girls and abuses their rights on an unimaginable scale. In this report, Plan UK calls upon the UK Government to increase its efforts to end early and forced marriage through enhanced cooperation across Whitehall, an increase in Department for International Development (DFID) programming in developing countries, and by using its influence to push for effective international policy and action. We believe that implementing the recommendations set out here will enable the Government to meet its existing commitments and will ensure that: Early and forced marriage is raised up the international agenda to strengthen global commitment to girls rights. All countries ensure girls have legal protection from early and forced marriage and actively prosecute perpetrators. Funding is increased for programmes that encourage families and communities to prioritise girls education over marriage. Government and donors invest in the support services for girls wanting to escape marriage. Increased scrutiny strengthens monitoring and reporting of global early and forced marriage. Plan UK believes that improving education and school retention for girls in the poorest countries plays a crucial role in eliminating early and forced marriage. Educated girls are more likely to have the skills, knowledge and confidence to claim their rights. Supporting girls to enrol in school and benefit from free, compulsory basic education (a minimum of nine years), in an environment that supports them to realise their rights, enables them to broaden their choices in life. This in turn works towards achieving the Education for All and Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Photo: Plan
Causes
The causes of early and forced marriage are complex, interrelated and dependent on individual circumstances and context. The practice is driven by factors that include gender inequality, poverty, negative traditional or religious norms, weak enforcement of law, and the pressure caused by conflict and natural disasters.
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Gender inequality
Across the globe, women and girls continue to occupy a lower status in society as a result of social and cultural traditions, attitudes and beliefs that deny them their rights and stifle their ability to play an equal role in their homes and communities. Although gender roles differ between cultures, and generations, and vary in relation to other factors including economic status, class, ethnicity, caste, sexuality, religion, HIV status or disability - gender norms generally work to the disadvantage of women of all ages. In many societies a young womans place is seen as in the home. Yet, she is doubly disadvantaged because her youth reduces her status within her household and community. Because she does not have the same standing as her male peers, she is not perceived to have the same skills or capabilities, and so there is less value in educating her. This inevitably contributes to the view that a good marriage is the most important way to secure a girls wellbeing. Gender inequalities also contribute to early marriage through their impact on formal legal systems. A number of the countries with the highest rates of early marriage, including Niger and India, also have unequal laws of consent for boys and girls, reinforcing the idea that it is suitable for girls to marry at an earlier age than boys. At the local level, patriarchal customary laws and traditions give women and girls less negotiating power around marriage and sexual and reproductive health and rights issues.
Poverty
A chronic lack of income severely impacts on household decision-making and may result in girls being viewed as an economic burden. The high costs of raising children and the perception of girls potential to earn an income as comparatively poor, pushes girls out of their homes and into marriage. For families facing chronic poverty, marriage often seems like the best way to safeguard girls futures and lighten their economic burden. One mother in contact with Plan Egypt told us: If my daughter gets married to a rich man or even a craftsman, he will take care of her. He will feed her and she will be well dressed. This will give me the opportunity to take care of the other siblings.11 Parents often feel they have no other option than to see their daughters marry and these ideas are communicated to their children. In one study in 36 villages in Niger, Plan found that the strongest argument girls themselves made in favour of early marriage was that it would improve their economic situation and increase their social status.12
My mother decided my marriage because we were homeless. My father died, my mothers in-laws kicked her out of their home and her parents had died. My marriage helped my mother reduce her responsibilities.
Girl interviewed by Plan Pakistan13
Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Poverty
Violence, abuse and forced sexual relations Sexual health implications (HIV and AIDS) Consequences Isolation and psychological trauma
Consequences
Without question, early and forced marriage contributes to driving girls into a cycle of poverty, ill health, illiteracy and powerlessness. Girls married early are more likely to experience violence, abuse and forced sexual relations, reduced levels of sexual and reproductive health, and lower levels of education with corresponding high rates of illiteracy.
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Getting a girl married at an early age is the best protection for her.
Mother, Egypt32
I dont want to get married and have children, at least not anytime soon I want to work and study. I dont want to be like another girl I know who is 13 years old and already pregnant. Yuleni, 13, Venezuela
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Ending Early and Forced Marriage is a prerequisite to the successful realisation of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
MDG 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger.
Early and forced marriage often marks the end of a girls schooling and the beginning of a life at home. She will have few opportunities to find work, and if she does, her lack of education means it will be poorly paid, making it almost impossible to break free from poverty. The children of mothers with lower levels of education who live in poverty are more likely to be malnourished.
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Photo: Plan
Girls tell Plan repeatedly that they do not want to be married early and that their right to schooling is compromised when they are forced to do so. Yet, the education sector donors included has been slow to identify and understand the impact of early and forced marriage on girls opportunities to enrol in and complete a full cycle of nine years of free, good quality, basic education.
Instead, there has been a tendency to focus debates on specific developmental issues, like health, maternal mortality, HIV and AIDS, resulting in a failure to develop a nuanced response to address the complex challenges of early and forced marriage. Girls have the right to choose when and whom to marry and this should be seen as indivisible from other rights, including the right to education. Approaches to early and forced marriage should take account of the importance of education in creating an environment that understands and promotes this right.
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Early marriage also impacts on a households perceptions of the affordability of education. Where it is felt that either girls will not need their education following their marriage, or that they will take their education to their marital home, families may view girls education as a less sound investment.41 Again, supporting girls to complete a cycle of quality basic education is best achieved by focusing on girls rights, adopting approaches to make education girl friendly and taking action to ensure learning environments are:
Safe
Ensuring pupils can get to and from school safely Providing a secure school environment that respects the rights of and is sensitive to the needs of its female pupils Enforcing penalties for teachers who sexually abuse students
Accessible
Ensuring educational opportunities are available and free Offering cash incentives to persuade families to keep girls in school Building schools close to communities Making sure there are separate sanitation facilities for girls Providing secure in-school accommodation and in-school childcare facilities where appropriate Developing flexible education opportunities for girls who have left school Involving parents and communities in running schools Conducting communication campaigns on the importance of girls education
Inspiring
Ensuring girls are taught by qualified teachers, especially female teachers Training teachers to understand girls rights and gender equality Supporting curricula for girls that are relevant to their needs, emphasise their abilitites, equip them with skills to find work and manage their finances and include teaching on issues like sexual and reproductive health
In our community, we dont allow a girl to continue her education when she is married because of her responsibilities. She doesnt have any spare time to continue her education. Her in-laws and home should be her priority. Womens focus group, Pakistan
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I said no to early marriage and Im very proud that my family understood that and let me continue my education. Im at higher secondary school now. Rugaia, 17, Sudan
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
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Photo: Plan
Globally, the countries with the highest early and forced marriage prevalence rates are Niger (75 per cent), Chad (72 per cent), Mali (71 per cent), Bangladesh (66 per cent), Guinea (63 per cent), CAR (61 per cent), Mozambique (52 per cent), Nepal (51 per cent), Malawi (50 per cent), Ethiopia (49 per cent), Sierra Leone (48 per cent), India (47 per cent), and Uganda (46 per cent). Twelve of the 20 countries with the highest prevalence are members of the Commonwealth.
Region South Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Latin America and the Caribbean Middle East and North Africa East Asia and the Pacific* CEE/CIS
*Excludes China
Number of women aged 20-24, married or in union by age 18 (millions) 32.6 14.3 6.3 3.5 5.6 2.2
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
South Asia
Half the worlds child brides live in South Asia, accounting for more early marriages than in any other region. While early and forced marriage is significantly more likely to affect girls, in India and Nepal, the rate for boys is 10 per cent or higher.55 In Bangladesh, 32 per cent of women aged between 20 and 24, were married by their 15th birthday; the rate is 13 per cent in India and 10 per cent in Nepal.56 In all three countries, between the ages of 15 and 18, these rates more than double, and in Nepal specifically they increase fivefold.
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Sub-Saharan Africa
At 39 per cent, sub-Saharan Africa has the second highest rate of early and forced marriage. A total of 14.3 million girls are married in the region before they reach the age of 18. The prevalence of early marriage varies across the continent with West and Central Africa at 43 per cent and Eastern and Southern Africa at 36 per cent. Among the countries where the rate of early and forced marriage exceeds 70 per cent Niger, Chad, and Mali adolescent fertility and maternal mortality rates are also high.59 Civil unrest and natural disasters, including droughts and famine, further contribute to high rates in the region.60 In countries where the legal age of marriage differs by sex, the age for women is always lower. In Benin, Cameroon, Gabon, Mali, Niger, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the legal age of marriage is 18 for males and only 15 for females.61
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
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Europe
Rates of early and forced marriage remain high in many European countries, with the highest rates in Central and Eastern Europe where 2.2 million girls have married before their 18th birthday.70 Countries with the highest rates of early and forced marriage include Georgia (17 per cent), Turkey (14 per cent), and Ukraine (10 per cent). At least 10 per cent of adolescents marry before the age of 18 in Britain and France.71 The prevalence of early and forced marriage in the UK and other industrialised countries confirms that this is an issue of global concern.
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Photo: Plan
Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
In addition, the Convention on Consent to Marriage, Minimum Age for Marriage and Registration of Marriages and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child require States to take action to set legal standards and prevent early and forced marriages. As of 20 June 2011 186 countries are party to CEDAW. Signatories to CEDAW and other conventions have made commitments, but do not always ensure they are implemented and enforced at national level. Statistics demonstrate clearly that the use of treaties and law alone as a means of regulating or preventing early marriage is inadequate without proper enforcement. In addition, there is a pressing need to raise awareness amongst girls and young women of their rights under international law, accompanied by domestic and international pressure to ensure enforcement.
*CEDAW - CEDAW General Recommendation 21 (Equality in marriage and family relations).
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As a signatory to key international human rights treaties, a vocal supporter of girls and womens rights and the third largest bilateral donor to basic education, the UK is uniquely placed to champion girls right to remain in education and to enable them to choose when and whom they marry.
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
The issue is already gathering attention across Whitehall and a reduction in early and forced marriage will provide a vital catalyst to achieving existing Government commitments to advance human rights and development goals. DFID, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), and the Home Office (HO) have all pledged to work on aspects of early and forced marriage or are already doing so: DFID is globally recognised for its commitment to girls rights as a result of its work to increase girls educational opportunities, reduce maternal mortality and delay the age at which girls first become pregnant, all of which depend on a reduction in early and forced marriage. The FCOs Forced Marriage Unit (FMU) works with governments around the world to ensure the safe return of young UK nationals taken abroad to marry, and the FCO and the Home Office have pledged to work together to extend similar services to non-UK nationals. In November 2010 the Home Office Parliamentary under Secretary of State for Equalities and Criminal Information was appointed Ministerial Champion for tackling violence against women and girls overseas. The post-holder is required to actively encourage the FCO, DFID, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) and other relevant ministries to use their influence in their domestic, European Union (EU) and international engagements to drive forward efforts on violence against women and girls. The Home Office, FCO and DFID must work together to co-ordinate enforcement of international treaties and laws, directly at home and via their overseas development assistance, and indirectly via peer pressure and international and bilateral advocacy. An integrated, coherent approach to addressing early and forced marriage is essential if joint working is to have a tangible impact.
I got an opportunity to attend a camp on the issue of child marriage, child rights and child labour. Having participated in the meeting as well, I encouraged my older sister to attend the camp and group meetings. My father was bent upon fixing up my sisters wedding this year. When my sister and I shared what we learnt about the implications of early marriage with him, he changed his mind with an assurance to wait until my sister was 18 years old. We sisters are extremely delighted with this decision! Ranjana, 13, India
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Photo: Plan
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2. Bilateral programmes
Policy and advocacy dialogue around the issue of early and forced marriage must be understood in relation to gender inequality. Responding to the issue should become part of DFIDs policy on education and violence against women and girls, and not be limited to health, including HIV, nutrition and maternal mortality agendas. Interventions, which address complex and negative socio-cultural norms, attitudes and behaviours, will be most successful. Work to tackle early and forced marriage should be built on a foundation of support for girls education and DFID should: Create and encourage the conditions necessary in partner countries for the education of girls and women through political leadership, advocacy and targeted Official Development Assistance (ODA). Draw upon the aid budget to invest in mechanisms to prevent early and forced marriage and offer protection and support services for girls at risk, including help for families, psycho-social support, child protection resources and legal assistance. Work with partner governments to develop in-country support networks for women and girls who seek to escape from early or forced marriages. Include early and forced marriage indicators in UKAid education programmes, Country Operational Plans, Education Portfolio Evaluation Frameworks and through a revised Gender Equality Action Plan. Provide cross-departmental indicators and monitoring systems. Work with development partners to strengthen the enforcement of birth registration and implement laws governing the minimum age for marriage, and incorporate measures to prevent early and forced marriage into other government sector initiatives, such as health, education, employment and domestic wealth creation. In tandem, strengthen laws compelling families to keep boys and girls in school and enforcing a compulsory education age and build the capacity of schools to report cases of marriage before the legal age. Ensure bilateral programmes incorporate work with power brokers on the need to toughen or enforce legislation on violence against women and girls. Develop training for law enforcement agencies on gender equality and human rights. Seek accountability for the provision of compulsory, free education for girls. At community level, build an understanding and acceptance of girls rights among caregivers. Fund and publicise existing good practice by civil society and womens organisations on early and forced marriage and the promotion of girls voices in advocacy for their rights and the building of girl-friendly governance and accountability mechanisms. Invest in strengthening the evidence base on the relationship between early and forced marriage and girls education and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals and the collection of age and sex disaggregated data. In particular, fund research into the role of education in preventing or delaying early and forced marriage. Ensure early and forced marriage interventions are included in planned piloting of new approaches to prevent violence against women and girls.
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Breaking Vows: Early and Forced Marriage and Girls Education 2011
Now Im 19 and have two children. I suffer a lot. I ask other young girls who arent yet victims of child marriage to remain vigilant and to speak out against such an old-fashioned practice. At the time, I didnt have any information on NGOs which fight against this sort of thing.
Marie,19, Benin75
In our village, a young girl of 15 years old was forced into marriage. We investigated the case and then reported it to the police officer in charge of child protection in our area. Appropriate action was taken and finally, the girl was freed. Sadly she later felt that she could not resume her classes at school because she felt very ashamed.
Locadie, 16, member of her local youth committee, Benin76
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Endnotes
1
Lane, S. (2011), Stealing Innocence: Child Marriage and Gender Inequality in Pakistan, Plan Finland & Abo Akademi University, Finland. Plan Sudan (2008), Life Through the Eyes of Children and Families in Teraitir. Plan Sudan (2008), Life Through the Eyes of Children and Families in Damokia. The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) can be accessed at: [http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc.htm]. The Convention for Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) can be accessed at: [http:// www2.ohchr.org/english/law/cedaw.htm]. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights can be accessed at:-[http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/doc/RESOLUTION/ GEN/NR0/043/88/IMG/NR004388.pdf?OpenElement].
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Senderowitz, J. (1995), Adolescent Health: Reassessing the Passage to Adulthood, (Washington: World Bank). 15 Plan (2003), Early Marriage in Niger: Results of the Survey Conducted by Plan in 36 Villages of Dosso Province in Niger.
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Lane, S. (2011), Stealing Innocence: Child Marriage and Gender Inequality in Pakistan, Plan Finland & Abo Akademi University, Finland. Plan Egypt (2010), Early Marriage. Plan Egypt (2010), Baseline Report of the Targeted Villages in the Early Marriage Grant-Funded Project. (Elaine Unterhalter, E and Nussey, C (2011) Scoping Paper for PLAN Because I am a Girl 2012 Report Institute of Education, University of London) North, A. (2009) Drought, drop out and early marriage: Feeling the effects of climate change in East Africa, Equals 24, 4. Bhattacharyya, K., P.M. Azizi, S.S. Shobair, and M.Y. Mohsini (2004), Drought Impacts and Potential for Their Mitigation in Southern and Western Afghanistan. International Water Management Institute Working Paper 91. Krishnamurthy, R. (2009), Review of Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in the Context of Disasters in Asia, Asian Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women (ARROW) Chennai: ARROW. Felten-Biermann, C. (2006), Gender and Natural Disaster: Sexualised Violence and the Tsunami, Development, Vol. 49, No. 3. Kottegoda, S., K. Samuel, and S. Emmanuel (2008), Reproductive Health Concerns in Six Conflict Affected Areas of Sri Lanka, Reproductive Health Matters, Vol. 16, No. 31. Jenson, R. and R. Thornton (2003), Early Female Marriage in the Developing World, Gender and Development, Vol. 11, No. 2. Bruce, J. and S. Clark (2004), The Implications of Early Marriage for HIV/AIDS Policy, Brief based on background paper prepared for the WHO/UNFPA/Population Council Technical Consultation on Married Adolescents New York: Population Council. United Nations Population Fund, State of World Population 2005, www.unfpa.org/swp/2005.
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Bruce, J. and S. Clark (2004), The Implications of Early Marriage for HIV/AIDS Policy, Brief based on background paper prepared for the WHO/UNFPA/Population Council Technical Consultation on Married Adolescents New York: Population Council. UNICEF (2011), The State of the Worlds Children 2011, Adolescence: An Age of Opportunity, New York: UNICEF.
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The Elders (2010), Child Marriage. [http://www.theelders. org/womens-initiatives/child-marriage]. Accessed 24 May 2011. Gender, Institutions and Development Database held by the OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development), accessed at http://www.oecd.org/documen t/16/0,3343,en_2649_33935_39323280_1_1_1_1,00.html UNFPA 2005), State of the World Population 2005, The Promise of Equality: Gender Equity, Reproductive Health and The MDGs, New York: UNFPA. UNICEF (2009), The State of the Worlds Children 2009: Maternal and Newborn Health, New York: UNICEF. Plan Egypt (2010), Early Marriage.
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Plan (2003), Early Marriage in Niger: Results of the Survey Conducted by Plan in 36 Villages of Dosso Province in Niger. Lane, S. (2011), Stealing Innocence: Child Marriage and Gender Inequality in Pakistan, Plan Finland & Abo Akademi University, Finland.
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UNICEF (2001), Early Marriage: Child Spouses, Innocenti Digest, No. 7, Mar., Florence; UNICEF. LeVine, R.A., S.E. LeVine, A. Richman, F. Uribe, C.Sunderland Correa, and P.M. Miller (1991), Womens Schooling and Child Care in the Demographic Transition: A Mexican Case Study, Population and Development Review, Vol. 17, No. 3. Plan (2003), Early Marriage in Niger: Results of the Survey Conducted by Plan in 36 Villages of Dosso Province in Niger.
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Hunt, F (2008) Dropping Out from School: A Cross Country Review of Literature, Create Pathways to Access, Research Monograph No 16 Lane, S. (2011), Stealing Innocence: Child Marriage and Gender Inequality in Pakistan, Plan Finland & Abo Akademi University, Finland. Lloyd, (2005) The Role of Schools in Promoting Sexual and Reproductive Health Among Adolescents in Developing Countries, WHO. (Elaine Unterhalter, E and Nussey, C (2011) Scoping Paper for PLAN Because I am a Girl 2012 Report Institute of Education, University of London). Jain, S. and Kurz, K., 2007, New Insights on Preventing Child Marriage: A Global Analysis of Factors and Programs, International Center for Research on Women (ICRW), Washington D.C. Clark, S., J. Bruce, and A. Dude (2006), Protecting Young Women from HIV/AIDS: The Case Against Child and Adolescent Marriage, International Family Planning Perspectives, Vol. 32, No. 2. UNICEF (2001), Early Marriage: Child Spouses, Innocenti Digest, No. 7, Mar., Florence[; - change to colon:]UNICEF. Norhona et al., (2008) Schooling, Transitions and Reproductive Citizenship for Poor People in Urban and Rural North India: Preliminary Results from Alwar and Dewas. RECOUP Working Paper No. 15. Plan Sudan (2009), See Our World. Plan, (2011) www.plan-international.org Erulkar, A and Muthengi, E, (2009) Evaluation of Berhane Hewan: A Program to Delay Child Marriage in Rural Ethiopia, International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, Volume 35, Number 1 Nzomo, J. et al. (2000), Non-Formal Education: Alternative Approaches to Basic Education in Kenya, Report of threeday forum in Samburu District, Kenya. Cited in UNICEF (2001), Early Marriage: Child Spouses, Innocenti Digest, No. 7, Mar., Florence; UNICEF. World Vision (2008), Before Shes Ready: 15 Places Girls Marry by 15, Monrovia: World Vision. UNICEF (2009), Progress for Children: A report Card on Child Protection, New York: UNICEF.
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Plan Egypt (2010), Baseline Report of the Targeted Villages in the Early Marriage Grant-Funded Project. Plan Egypt (2010), Early Marriage. Plan (2009), The State of the Worlds Girls 2009. Girls in the Global Economy: Adding It All Up. Mathieu, A. (2006), Reaching the Girls in South Asia: Differentiated Needs and Responses in Emergencies, UNICEF and United Nations Girls Education Initiative. Plan Egypt (2010), Baseline Report of the Targeted Villages in the Early Marriage Grant-Funded Project. Lane, S. (2011), Stealing Innocence: Child Marriage and Gender Inequality in Pakistan, Plan Finland & Abo Akademi University, Finland.
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Field, Erica, and Attila Ambrus. 2008. Early marriage, age of menarche, and female schooling attainment in Bangladesh. Journal of Political Economy 116(5): 881930). Laugharn, P. (2007), Negotiating Education for Many Enrolment, Dropout and Persistence in the Community Schools of Kolondiba, Mali, Project Report. Consortium for Research on Educational Access, Transitions and Equity (CREATE). Plan Egypt (2010), Baseline Report of the Targeted Villages in the Early Marriage Grant-Funded Project. Plan, (2011) www.plan-international.org Tomasevski, K. (2005), Human Rights and Poverty Reduction, Girls Education Through a Human Rights Lens: What Can Be Done Differently, What Can Be Made Better, ODI.
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UNICEF (2009), Progress for Children: A Report Card on Child Protection, New York: UNICEF. Gender, Institutions and Development Database held by the OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development), accessed at http://www.oecd.org/documen t/16/0,3343,en_2649_33935_39323280_1_1_1_1,00.html Plan Bangladesh (2009), See Our World: We Are Happy to be Able to Stop Early Marriage. Plan India, (2011) The End Of Innocence UNICEF (2009), Progress for Children: A Report Card on Child Protection, New York: UNICEF.
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UNICEF (2009), Progress for Children: A Report Card on Child Protection, New York: UNICEF. UNICEF (2009), The State of the Worlds Children 2009: Maternal and Newborn Health, New York: UNICEF. Foreign and Commonwealth Office (2001), Forced Marriage. [http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/travel-and-livingabroad/when-things-go-wrong/forced-marriage/] Accessed 24 May 2011. HM Government (2009), Multi-Agency Practice Guidelines: Handling Cases of Forced Marriage, London: Forced Child Marriage Unit, FCO. Plan India (2011), Update on Haliya. Plan Benin (2009), Testimony from Marie from Atacora, Benin. Plan Benin (2009), See Our World.
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Plan is a global childrens charity. We work with children in the worlds poorest countries to help them build a better future. A future you would want for all children, your family and friends. For over 70 years weve been taking action and standing up for every childs right to fulfil their potential by: giving children a healthy start in life, including access to safe drinking water securing the education of girls and boys working with communities to prepare for and survive disasters inspiring children to take a lead in decisions that affect their lives enabling families to earn a living and plan for their childrens future.
We do whats needed, where its needed most. We do what you would do. With your support children, families and entire communities have the power to move themselves from a life of poverty to a future with opportunity.
www.becauseiamagirl.org