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Empowering Adolescent Girls in Developing Countries

Empowering Adolescent Girls in Developing Countries

Caroline Harper, Nicola Jones, Rachel Marcus

3.8(5)on Goodreads

About this book

Adolescence, wherever you live, is a potentially turbulent and challenging time and no less so in the four countries where we undertook our work. Here, transitions through adolescence are fraught with difficulties, in part due to the deeply embedded gender norms which determine what a girl can and cannot do and how she must be. Each specific context came with its own factors: multi-ethnic and multi-religious communities, remoteness, variable services (if any at all) and, sometimes, a policy and cultural context without recognition of adolescence, where the transition to adulthood is short or immediate rather than prolonged. Nevertheless, what we know from biological sciences is that adolescence is a developmental period ? a time when the body and mind changes. These changes bring with them potential which in the right context, can open new opportunities. Our interest was in exploring that potential and how gendered norms might truncate opportunities and limit the development of capabilities which every young adult could aspire to own ? the ability to have a political voice, to be educated, to be in good health, to have control over one?s body, to be free from violence, to be able to own property and earn a livelihood, to be economically and politically empowered. We were intrigued by the very common experiences of adolescent girls across multiple contexts. This learning and sharing enabled us to explore in much greater depth what norms are and how they operate within political and institutional spaces at national and community levels. It also allowed us to explore the changing and different conceptual understandings of gendered social relations, gender equality and the usage of the term ?norm? to capture embedded, often implicit, informal rules by which people abide, and which are bound into the values people and societies accept implicitly, accept reluctantly or actively contest.

Details

OL Work ID
OL20930786W

Subjects

AnthropologyAdolescent girlsSex roleDeveloping countries, social conditionsDeveloping countries, economic conditionsEconomic developmentGender identitySex discriminationPolitics and governmentGender IdentityDéveloppement économiqueIdentité sexuelleDiscrimination sexuellePolitique et gouvernementTeenage girlsEconomic conditionsSocial conditions

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