On June 16, in honour of the Day of the African Child, UNICEF proudly unveiled its new initiative, “Leveraging Gender-Responsive Social Protection to Prevent and Respond to Child Marriage: Technical Guidance and Toolkit.” This global virtual event brought together a diverse group of participants, including government representatives, UNICEF country and regional offices, various United Nations agencies, civil society organisations, development partners, research institutions, and youth networks.
The aim was to introduce this important guidance and reinforce our shared commitment to preventing child marriage through gender-responsive social protection systems.
The launch highlighted a growing understanding that social protection is not just a tool for reducing poverty; it’s also a vital means of safeguarding adolescent girls from child marriage, broadening their opportunities, and enhancing their overall wellbeing. The event emphasized the need to shift from isolated efforts to comprehensive, government-led systems that can effectively reach girls on a larger scale.
Purpose of the Technical Guidance and Toolkit
The recently released guidance tackles a major challenge in implementation. While there’s been a notable increase in global evidence and policy commitments aimed at preventing child marriage, many countries still struggle to turn these promises into effective, coordinated programs that truly support at-risk girls.
This toolkit was created to fill that gap, offering governments and practitioners clear, step-by-step instructions on how to:
Let’s make the most of our current social protection systems to tackle and respond to child marriage effectively. We need to create gender-responsive social protection programs that specifically target the unique challenges faced by adolescent girls.
By combining cash transfers with essential services like education, healthcare, child protection, social welfare, and psychosocial support, we can make a real difference. It’s also crucial to enhance coordination across various sectors to ensure that support is comprehensive and timely.
Finally, we should focus on building scalable and sustainable interventions that can be integrated into our national social protection systems.
Instead of pushing for separate projects, the guidance suggests that countries focus on enhancing their current systems. This way, support can become a regular part of the framework, making it more efficient and better equipped to meet the changing needs of girls.
Youth Perspective: Centering Girls’ Experiences
One of the standout contributions came from Sabnam Sunar, a passionate youth advocate from Nepal. Her insights really anchored the conversation in the real-life experiences of adolescent girls.
She gently reminded everyone involved:
Child marriage often stems from poverty, a lack of support, and the few options available to many girls in their lives.
Her intervention highlighted that tackling child marriage means we need to confront the deep-rooted inequalities that hold girls back. She emphasized that social protection shouldn’t just be seen as a short-term fix; it should be woven into long-term national systems that offer ongoing support throughout a girl’s teenage years.
Sabnam also urged for a stronger investment in integrated services that link education, health, child protection, and social protection systems. This way, we can make sure that girls get the timely and coordinated support they need before they find themselves at risk of child marriage.
Her insights underscored the crucial need for adolescent girls to have a real voice in shaping program design, implementation, and policy changes.
Panel Discussion and Country Perspectives
The launch showcased an impressive panel made up of representatives from government, philanthropy, and international development organisations. The speakers shared valuable insights on how countries and their partners can put gender-responsive social protection into action.
Government Perspective
Enoch Bonongwe, who represents the Ministry of Social Welfare in Malawi, emphasized how crucial it is to integrate child marriage prevention into the country’s social protection systems instead of just depending on project-based efforts.
His insights showcased Malawi’s dedication to enhancing coordinated government actions that effectively support vulnerable girls through existing public systems.
Financing Perspective
Sophie Hodder from the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation highlighted how crucial it is to have ongoing funding for gender-responsive social protection. She pointed out that investments need to focus on strengthening systems, enabling countries to provide comprehensive services on a large scale while also ensuring they remain sustainable in the long run.
Economic and Development Perspective
Julia Braunmiller from the World Bank emphasized the strong economic case for investing in adolescent girls. She pointed out that by preventing child marriage, we can achieve significant social and economic benefits, including better educational outcomes, improved health, higher productivity, and a decrease in intergenerational poverty.
The panel as a whole echoed a unified message: piecemeal efforts just won’t cut it when it comes to tackling the complex factors that drive child marriage. What’s really needed are coordinated, systems-based strategies that put adolescent girls at the heart of policy and program development.
Key Messages from the Event
We noticed a few key themes popping up again and again during our conversations.
Social Protection as a Platform for Prevention
Participants highlighted that national social protection systems serve as a powerful foundation for preventing child marriage on a large scale. These existing systems are capable of pinpointing vulnerable households, providing financial support, and linking families to crucial services before girls face increased risks.
Integrated Service Delivery
Relying solely on cash transfers usually doesn’t tackle the various issues that lead to child marriage.
The speakers highlighted how crucial it is to pair financial assistance with:
– Educational services
– Health, including sexual and reproductive health services
– Child protection initiatives
– Social welfare programs
– Case management and referral systems
Integrated service delivery provides a more holistic approach to supporting girls and their families, tackling not just the immediate issues but also the wider social and economic factors that contribute to child marriage.
Stronger Cross-Sector Coordination
To effectively tackle child marriage, we need a united effort across various ministries and sectors. Participants emphasized the importance of enhancing coordination among social protection, education, health, child protection, gender, and finance institutions.
This collaboration is crucial for ensuring that policies are implemented coherently and services are delivered efficiently.
Gender-Responsive and Shock-Responsive Systems
The conversations highlighted the importance of creating social protection systems that can tackle both daily challenges and unexpected crises.
Gender-responsive systems take into account the unique risks that adolescent girls encounter, while shock-responsive mechanisms allow governments to quickly step in during emergencies—like conflicts, climate disasters, or economic downturns—when the threat of child marriage tends to rise.
Meaningful Youth Participation
One key takeaway is that adolescent girls shouldn’t just be seen as recipients of programs; they need to be actively involved in shaping the policies and services that affect them. Their unique experiences and viewpoints are crucial for creating interventions that truly meet their needs, making them more accessible and effective.
Significance of the Toolkit
The launch marks a significant step forward in UNICEF’s mission to put an end to child marriage. By turning research and evidence into actionable guidance, this toolkit provides governments and development partners with the essential tools they need to enhance national systems.
What’s crucial here is that this guidance helps countries shift from small-scale pilot projects to more comprehensive strategies that can effectively reach larger populations through established social protection networks.
This systems-based approach not only boosts efficiency and sustainability but also promises a lasting impact, all while making sure that interventions are tailored to meet the varied needs of girls.
Next Steps
The launch isn’t the end; it’s just the start of a new phase in our implementation journey.
UNICEF and its partners are now gearing up to support countries in:
- Tailoring the technical guidance to fit our national contexts.
- Enhance social protection systems that are responsive to gender needs.
- Boost coordination across different sectors.
- Work on expanding integrated services specifically for adolescent girls.
- Increasing investment in sustainable and scalable programs is essential.
- Focusing on generating evidence and fostering continuous learning.
- And more importantly, we must keep adolescent girls at the heart of our program design and policy reforms.
Conclusion
The launch of the “Leveraging Gender-Responsive Social Protection to Prevent and Respond to Child Marriage: Technical Guidance and Toolkit” marks a major step forward in the global fight against child marriage through integrated social protection systems. By uniting governments, development partners, researchers, civil society, and young advocates, this event underscored a collective commitment to turning evidence into meaningful action.
The conversations emphasized that tackling child marriage goes beyond just providing financial support. Real, lasting change hinges on coordinated, gender-sensitive systems that link cash transfers with education, health, child protection, and social welfare services, all while ensuring that adolescent girls have a say in the policies and programs that are meant to help them.
As we move into the implementation phase, this toolkit serves as a practical guide for countries aiming to enhance their national systems, expand effective interventions, and speed up progress toward a future where every girl can live safely, pursue her education, assert her rights, and achieve her full potential.

