"Child marriage is not an intractable tradition,"
lead researcher and Ethiopia country director Annabel Erulkar of the The
Population Council said in a statement. "When families and communities
recognize the harms of child marriage, and have economic alternatives, they
will delay the age at which their daughters get married," she said in a
statement. The Population Council, which carried out a recent study, found it
doesn’t cost much to provide the educational support, economic incentives and
community conversations necessary to delay marriage.
Research trials lasting three years in Tanzania and Ethiopia
found girls between ages 12 and 17 were less likely to get married when offered
schools supplies or economic incentives such as farm animals for every year
they continued their education. The study found that community conversations
about social norms can also help delay marriage. More than one-tenth of girls
in sub-Saharan Africa are married by age 15, and 4 in 10 are married by age 18.
Girls who marry before their 18th birthday are more likely to become victims of
domestic violence than those who marry later. Education has been a critical
factor in preventing child marriage in a number of developing nations. Girls
with higher levels of schooling are less likely to marry young.
The study found that girls aged 12 to 14 who received school
supplies were 94 percent less likely to be married at the conclusion of the
study than those who had not. Girls aged 15 to 17 in the Amhara region were 50
percent less likely to get married when given two chickens for every year they
stayed in school, the research revealed. In Tanzania’s Tabora region, where the
marriage rate for 12- to 17-year-old girls is 8 percent, the study found that
offering two goats to girls aged 15 to 17 led to a two-thirds drop in early
marriage. In both countries, the positive results stemmed from a combination of
educational and economic incentives, as well as community discussions about the
damaging effects of child marriage. The three interventions cost just $44 per
girl per year in Ethiopia and $117 in Tanzania, the study said.
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