Global March

Gender Responsive Intervention to Child Labour

The prevalence of gender-based violence and discrimination worldwide remains high. In this context, Global March’s gender responsive intervention will pay particular attention to the vulnerabilities that girls and young women face such as sexual violence, early and forced marriages, forced labour, child labour, trafficking, barriers in access to education, etc. Violence against girls and (young) women and the denial of their economic rights stand in the way of achieving substantive gender equality and increase their vulnerability to child labour, child trafficking and (commercial) sexual exploitation. Once trapped in physical and economic forms of exploitation, it is even harder to turn this around, more so because both forms of discrimination and exploitation are driven and endorsed by the same set of norms and values. Therefore, Global March is not only addressing economic inequality and lack of access to education amongst women and girl child but also addresses underlying social-cultural norms and the policies and legislation that reflect and sustain these norms and values.
By supporting local partners through capacity building and strengthening network voices as well as through research, lobby and advocacy, Global March’s gender responsive intervention wants to achieve the following goals:

  • Civil society organisations and networks in the program countries have the capacity to influence governments and to actively advocate for the active implementation of policies that challenge girls’ and women’s economic exclusion and gender based violence, while coordinating their interventions.
  • Local opinion leaders and communities in the selected countries promote norms and values ​​that prevent violence and economic exclusion of girls and women.
  • Governments in the program countries implement effective policies, legislations, programs and measures that combat violence and promote economic empowerment of girls and young women.
  • Dutch companies and companies in the program countries are committed to the elimination of violence against girls in their supply chain and provide access to work, safer workplaces, better working conditions for girls and young women and support the transition from school to work for girls.
  • Global March addresses the issue of gender based violence and economic empowerment of girls and young women by aligning it with the strategy to eliminate child labour and promoting access to free, quality, inclusive and equitable education for all children, with particular focus on girls.

    As an inter-linked strategy, Global March is working to see changes across three measures for the goals mentioned above: the agenda setting, practice change and the policy change at local, national, regional and global levels.

     
     
    GAA Annual Reports

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