51. High Stakes for Young Lives: Examining Strategies to Stop Child Marriage
- Author:
- Gayle Tzemach Lemmon
- Publication Date:
- 04-2014
- Content Type:
- Working Paper
- Institution:
- Council on Foreign Relations
- Abstract:
- An estimated one-third of girls around the globe become brides before the age of eighteen and one in nine do so before the age of fifteen. In recent decades, the issue of child marriage has grown in profile and priority for many policymakers. The Elders, a group of global leaders including former United Nations (UN) secretary-general Kofi Anna n and former U.S. president Jimmy Carter, have taken on the issue and opted to use their platform to speak out against the practice, as have other prominent international organizations. The UN estimated that in 2011, nearly seventy million women ages twenty to twenty-four had married before they turned eighteen. If current trends continue without pause, in the next ten years, more than 140 million girls will be married before their eighteenth birthdays. In order to design interventions that can scale to match the level of the challenge, it is critical to understand the drivers of child marriage and the factors that can curb it.
- Topic:
- Globalization, Human Rights, Human Welfare, and Reform
- Political Geography:
- United States