Factors predicting the resilience of school re-integrated teenage mothers in Zimbabwe
This study investigated the factors predicting resilience among teenage mothers reintegrated into schools in Zimbabwe.
This study investigated the factors predicting resilience among teenage mothers reintegrated into schools in Zimbabwe.
Although Bhutan has recently advanced beyond response to preventive services for violence against women and children, there is limited data on adolescent violence to inform policy and interventions, highlighting the need for studies like the 2016 Global School-based Health Survey (GSHS).
The Welsh Government published the ‘Framework on embedding a whole school approach to emotional and mental wellbeing’ (Welsh Government, 2021) (referred to as 'the Framework' subsequently) in March 2021 as statutory guidance to governing bodies of maintained education settings (subseque
UNESCO commissioned a study to explore how national comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) programmes affect learners’ relationships in five countries: Argentina, Armenia, Lao PDR, Namibia and Nigeria. This study had two objectives:
Adolescent parenthood is a significant issue in Sub-Saharan Africa, which can have adverse effects on mothers, their children and families.
Discretionary Universal Free School Meal (UFSM) schemes for 4-11-year-olds were implemented in four local authorities with high child poverty levels in London, UK. The schemes were initiated between 2009/10 and 2014/15. The first scheme was evaluated as part of a national 2-year pilot.
This youth-led policy brief, supported by Plan International’s She Leads project, examines the pressing issue of cyberbullying across Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon.
Drawing on over two decades of data, Young Lives is one of the few studies collecting longitudinal data on mental health in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), including in conflict-affected regions of Ethiopia, providing a holistic, life-course perspective of risk factors and effective stra
Historically, adolescent pregnancy has been conceptualized as an outcome of child marriage, but in Southeast Asia, the contexts and drivers of adolescent pregnancy are less well-understood.
Menstrual symptoms may negatively impact academic achievement, but rigorous population-based studies are lacking.