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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsChild Marriage Isn't Just Happening "Over There"
Child Marriage Isnt Just Happening Over There
The thought is heartbreaking: an 11-year old girl, forced to marry a man several years her senior who sexually abused her, drops out of school and bears five children by the time she is 17. She is a child with adult responsibilitiesbut a minor in the eyes of the law. The story of this crime doesnt take place in Afghanistan or Niger: It is set in Florida. Child marriage, where one or both parties are under the age of 18, affects 650 million women and 150 million men worldwideincluding the United States and Europe. Thats one girl every 23 seconds. This June, close to 500 advocates, activists, survivors, practitioners and donors gathered in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia at the global meeting of Girls Not Brides, an international coalition dedicated to ending child marriage. We met to dissect and deliberate the root causes of and solutions to child marriageand while, as Americans, we like to think of ourselves immune to many of the worlds most pressing concerns, what we heard about the ways in which child marriage impacts girls in other countries resonated with our work on this issue right here in the United States.
Oumou Salif of Mali marks her country of the world map in The Village on the third day at the Girls Not Brides Global Meeting 2018 at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre. (Graham Crouch / Girls Not Brides)
Worldwide, UNICEF estimates that child marriage rates are going down, and that approximately 25 million child marriages were prevented in the last decade. This is incredible progress on an issue many thought both untouchable and unchangeable 10 years ago. The decline in the numbers of girls and boys getting married as children is due to the efforts of many, but global pressure must continue if we are to end this practice for good. Child marriage is recognized as a human rights abuse, one which often violates girls rights to health and education, and which can trap them in a cycle of poverty and violence. It has enormous consequences for the girls themselves, but also for their communities and the economy. While both boys and girls are married as children, girls bear a greater burden: The health and well-being of girls who marry as children is worse, both in the near- and long-term, than those of their peers who are able to delay marriage until they are at least 18.
It is often difficult to be a global leader in a movement when our own domestic policies and practices do not match our foreign policy rhetoric. In the United States, efforts to reform minimum age of marriage laws have been met with mixed results. As advocates focused on child marriage at the global and national levels, our objectives going into the meeting were quite different, but we came away feeling more united than ever. For the most part, we already know how to solve child marriage: Empower girls with information, skills and support networks; provide economic support and incentives to girls and their families; educate and rally parents and community members; enhance girls access to a high-quality education; and encourage supportive laws and policies.
If we have the solutions, why is this still an issue?
Again and again at the Global Meeting, Girls Not Brides members the world over mentioned the same impediments to progress: a lack of concerted funding to tackle child marriage, closing civil society spaces and resistance from politicians, religious and cultural leaders. Laws, and their consistent enforcement, are a key piece of the multisector approach that is necessary to end child marriage. In almost all 50 states and the District of Columbia, child marriage is legal. The Tahirih Justice Center has been working tirelessly to encourage the adoption of minimum age of marriage laws that set the age of marriage at 18 without exceptions for both boys and girls, but despite meaningful progress in several statesVirginia, Texas, New York and Kentuckyand two new bright-line laws in Delaware and New Jersey making 18 the minimum age of marriage without exceptions, progress on state-by-state legislation has been a long and often difficult road.
Legislative progress often moves slower than advocates would hope, but we can see that change is possible. Indeed, it is happening: the number of people marrying before the age of 18 in the United States fell by about 61 percent between 2000 and 2010. Still, data collected from 41 states showed that between 2000 and 2015, well over 200,000 children under age 18 were married in America.
. . . .
http://msmagazine.com/blog/2018/08/01/child-marriage-isnt-just-happening/
oberliner
(58,724 posts)Here are some organizations to consider for donations:
https://www.girlsnotbrides.org/take-action/
Note: Most of the above are int'l groups - if anyone has recommendations for US groups, please share!
niyad
(113,344 posts)oberliner
(58,724 posts)Hopefully someone high profile can take up this cause and get a conversation going that will lead to sustained action.
As that asshole in office sucks all the O2 out of the news cycle, many other things need our attention. Thank you
oberliner
(58,724 posts)Yemen would be another example.
niyad
(113,344 posts)all times.
an old adage, "beware the man looking you straight in the eye. he wants to prevent you from noticing something". I read it as "beware when the powers to be try to fix your attention in one direction. they are doing something on the other side they hope you won't notice"
we notice.
MineralMan
(146,317 posts)approval by a court. I remember a 14-year-old girl in my hometown who got married after getting pregnant. She married the 16-year-old father of the child. That was in California in the early 1960s. As far as I know, they're still together now. They were about 10 years ago, anyhow.
14 was pretty young, but there were quite a few 16 year old brides in my small town, for the same reason, too. For others, those marriages were an object lesson in a time when contraception was extremely difficult to obtain if you were under 21 and unmarried. I remember all that very well, from my teen years.
oberliner
(58,724 posts)MineralMan
(146,317 posts)Last edited Fri Aug 3, 2018, 04:20 PM - Edit history (1)
article without my clicking on another link, so I left. I'm impatient that way. Instead, I went to find a list of laws, state-by-state, so I could draw my own conclusions.
Do you have a problem with my methods, oberliner? If so, why? How could that possibly matter to you?
Note: I am referring to the link in your post below, not in the OP. I did read the article from the OP, which did not have stats on each state, so I went to the Wikipedia list. I'm not sure why you are interesting yourself in my reading methods, though. I suggest you read as you wish and leave me to do as I choose.
MineralMan
(146,317 posts)Notice that 19 states have no minimum age. With parental and/or court approval, you'll be surprised at how young people can be and get married in some circumstances.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_marriage_in_the_United_States
oberliner
(58,724 posts)but maybe consider looking at the "first comprehensive analysis of provisions in all 50 states and Washington, DC that leave children more vulnerable to forced marriage and the harms of early marriage" linked to in the article.
In case you missed it:
https://www.tahirih.org/pubs/falling-through-the-cracks-how-laws-allow-child-marriage-to-happen-in-todays-america/
MineralMan
(146,317 posts)up-to-date. Why would I not consult such a list? I'm a fan of raw data, on which I can base my own opinions.
Demovictory9
(32,457 posts)Igel
(35,320 posts)hides that it's often different things being discussed, both in quantity and in quality.
But finding equivalences makes it "everybody's" problem instead of those whose problem it disproportionately is.
This is "white lives matter" redux.