Girls’ right to education: a study of what impact menstruation has on female school participation in Zimbabwe
Educating girls has been argued to be a key contributor to a healthier and more affluent nation.
Educating girls has been argued to be a key contributor to a healthier and more affluent nation.
The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the success of the Journeys intervention in improving school climate; shifting gender attitudes toward more gender equality; strengthening student’s social and emotional learning; and reducing the prevalence and extent that pupils experience bully
Improvements in childhood nutrition increase schooling and economic returns in later life in a virtuous cycle. However, better nutrition also leads to an earlier onset of menstruation (menarche).
This series of briefs summarizes the key learnings to emerge from two regional workshops on approaches to preventing and responding to school-related gender-based violence (SRGBV).
Cette brochure fait la synthèse des études diagnostiques de la réponse apportée par le secteur de l’éducation aux violences de genre en milieu scolaires au Cameroun, au Togo et au Sénégal.
Cette brochure donne un aperçu d’une étude diagnostique de la réponse apportée par le secteur de l’éducation aux violences de genre en milieu scolaire au Togo.
Cette brochure donne un aperçu d’une étude diagnostique de la réponse apportée par le secteur de l’éducation aux violences de genre en milieu scolaire au Sénégal.
Cette brochure donne un aperçu d’une étude diagnostique de la réponse apportée par le secteur de l’éducation aux violences de genre en milieu scolaire au Cameroun.
School-related violence in all its forms, including bullying, is an infringement of children’s and adolescents’ rights to education and health and well-being. No country can achieve inclusive and equitable quality education for all if learners experience violence in school.
Education is a fundamental human right and essential for the exercise of all other human rights. However, learning environments are not always inclusive and safe places. They can be sites of physical, verbal, psychological and sexual violence, and social exclusion.