Protection of women and children in Somalia
Somalia is in a post-conflict state, where the civil war has displaced families and where factors of gender-based violence are multi-causal and complex. The country is mainly patriarchal, meaning that men have a greater influence on decision-making at the household, community, and political levels. According to the Global Database on Violence Against Women, the prevalence of child marriage in Somalia is 35.5%, while that of Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C) is 99.2 %. With higher literacy level for males (50%) compared to females (26%), there is lower enrolment of girls in schools (40%) compared to boys (60%). It is very common for girls to have to drop out of school to stay at home to assist with household chores or help raise young children.
This intervention is built on the evidence from the pilot and scale-up phases of UNICEF Communities Care approach, implemented by CISP in Somalia for 11 years. The John Hopkins University evaluations have shown that this approach is effective in catalysing a positive change in social norms that support GBV and has resulted in increased confidence in GBV service providers among communities that took part in the intervention.
Within the research program of FCDO What Works, this mainstreaming project tests transformative approaches to prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG) by strengthening institutional capacities of the Ministry of Women and Human Rights Development, Ministry of Education and Ministry of Health to adopt the approach in the long term. It focuses on physical and psychological violence against children in school and at home, on bullying and cyberbullying, on sexual violence in the community and domestic violence against women.
The intervention is aligned with What Works Feminist Principles as: women and girls are meaningfully engaged in the program through consultation and representation at key decision-making levels at home, community, and national levels through the community-led discussions and action plans. The initiative engages 2 women-led feminist organizations that will represent women’s and girl’s voices and priorities at the grassroot level.
The project goal is to contribute to a reduction in violence against women, boys and girls through creation of safer schools and communities by transforming harmful social norms into positive social norms that uphold the dignity, safety and equity for women, boys and girls and their families in Banadir and Galmudug regions of Somalia.
In detail
Women Initiative for Social Empowerment (WISE); Northern Frontier Youth League (NoFYL); Ministry of Education; Ministry of Health; Ministry of Women and Human Rights Development; John Hopkins University.