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Child marriages plunged when girls stayed in school in Nigeria

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Why This Matters

The educational initiative in northern Nigeria demonstrates that involving local religious leaders and community engagement can significantly reduce child marriage rates, highlighting the importance of culturally sensitive approaches in addressing harmful practices. This success underscores the potential for education and community collaboration to create meaningful social change in regions facing high child marriage prevalence, benefiting both the tech industry and consumers by emphasizing the role of innovative, community-driven solutions in social development.

Key Takeaways

Rates of child marriages in northern Nigeria fell sharply when communities were involved in girls’ education.Credit: Giles Moberly/Alamy

An educational programme for young girls in northern Nigeria that involved local religious leaders massively reduced the number of child marriages, a study reported in Nature today has found1.

Nearly 80% of girls in northern Nigeria get married before they turn 18. Most of those who get married are already out of school or stop attending after marriage.

A project developed by Daniel Perlman, a medical anthropologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and implemented by the Centre for Girls Education (CGE), in Abuja, is working with community leaders to encourage girls to stay in school and, as a consequence, to delay marriage. Now, a study involving more than 1,000 girls by Perlman and his colleagues suggests that the strategy is working.

Co-author Maryam Abubakar at CGE says that the success of the programme, which is called Pathways to Choice, had a lot do to with the involvement of local religious leaders. “We had meetings with them, we introduced the project and we were lucky that they accepted it,” she says. “They were involved in the programme from the beginning.”

‘Widespread and severe’

Only around 41% of women under the age of 35 in northwestern and northeastern states have ever attended school. Reasons why families might not enrol their daughters in school and instead opt for early marriage include scepticism about education quality and fear of violence. Nearly 1,700 schoolchildren have been kidnapped in Nigeria since 2014.

“There’s a lot of insurgents, bandits and terrorists, and sometimes they capture single girls,” says Olubukola Omobowale, a community physician and global mental-health specialist at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria. “Families believe that, if the girl gets married early, then the husband can protect her.”

Ending child marriage — defined as formal marriages or informal unions involving a child under the age of 18 — is one of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Child marriage is illegal in Nigeria according to the country’s Child Rights Act. But several states, all in northern Nigeria, have not adopted the act. These states use the Islamic legal system, or Sharia, for both civil and criminal law. In those states, many people aren’t even aware of the law, says Omobowale.

The rates of child marriage in northern Nigeria, where 48% of girls are married before the age of 15, are much higher than in the rest of the country. “Child marriage in this setting is what I would call both widespread and severe,” says co-author Isabelle Cohen, an economist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

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