Research Areas > Transitions to Adulthood > Child Marriage

TRANSITIONS TO ADULTHOOD
Child Marriage/Married Adolescents

Population Council researchers estimate that approximately one-third of girls living in the developing world (excluding China) are married before age 18. These millions of girls are defined as “children” by the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Council research also indicates that approximately one out of seven girls in the developing world (excluding China) marry before their fifteenth birthday.

Child marriage violates girls’ human rights by excluding them from decisions regarding the timing of marriage and choice of spouse. In many instances, child marriage marks an abrupt initiation into sexual relations, often with a husband who is considerably older and a relative stranger. Married girls, under pressure to become pregnant, face the risk of problems during childbirth. In addition, married girls have few social connections, restricted mobility, limited control over resources, and little power in their new households.

Although age at marriage is increasing in most regions of the developing world, if present patterns continue, over 100 million girls will be married as children in the next ten years. The countries with the highest proportion of child brides are typically in West Africa and South Asia. “Hot spots” of child marriage (whether characterized by region, ethnic or religious group, or economic disadvantage) exist where a large proportion of girls are married even before their fifteenth birthday (see bar graph for some regional hot spots of child marriage).

Percentage of women ages 20–24 who are married by ages 15 and 18, by geographic area

Source: Demographic and Health Surveys.

Naturally, wherever child marriage is prevalent, large populations of married girls also exist, and both girls at risk of child marriage and those already affected are in need of support and information. Thus, Population Council projects in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Nigeria, and elsewhere foster an environment that is supportive of later marriage. These projects offer families the resources and options they need to defer marriage while supporting married girls by addressing the isolation and disempowerment that characterize their situation and their health care needs.

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This page updated
3 October 2008


   

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What's New

Child marriage is common throughout francophone West Africa. To read more about the Population Council’s work on child marriage in this regionclick here.

Population Council staff worked with PBS's NOW on "Child Brides: Stolen Lives," a documentary that aired 12 October 2007. The program showcases efforts to improve opportunities for Mayan girls in Guatemala. (more) (offsite link to documentary)

"Girls' Adolescence in Burkina Faso: A Pivot Point for Social Change"a new report from the Population Councilpresents research findings on the social and economic contexts of Burkinabé girls' lives and proposes a forward-looking agenda. (PDF)

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Publications/Resources

"Early marriage and sexual and reproductive health risks: Experiences of young women and men in Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, India" (2008) (PDF)

"Terms of marriage and time-use patterns of young wives: Evidence from rural Bangladesh" (2008) (abstract) (PDF)

"The experience of married adolescent girls in northern Nigeria" (2007) (PDF)

Assessing the multiple disadvantages of Mayan girls: The effects of gender, ethnicity, poverty, and residence on education in Guatemala (2007) (PDF) (PDF en español)

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