Working Paper

Empowering Adolescent Girls : Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial in Uganda

Mostrar el registro sencillo de la publicación

collection.link.213
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/11866
collection.name.213
Other papers
dc.contributor.author
Bandiera, Oriana
dc.contributor.author
Buehren, Niklas
dc.contributor.author
Burgess, Robin
dc.contributor.author
Goldstein, Markus
dc.contributor.author
Gulesci, Selim
dc.contributor.author
Rasul, Imran
dc.contributor.author
Sulaiman, Munshi
dc.date.accessioned
2016-12-01T15:37:00Z
dc.date.available
2016-12-01T15:37:00Z
dc.date.issued
2012-12
dc.date.lastModified
2021-04-23T14:04:31Z
dc.description.abstract
Nearly 60 percent of Uganda's population is aged below twenty. This generation faces health and economic challenges associated with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), early pregnancy, and unemployment. Whether these challenges are due to a lack of information and or vocational skills is however uncertain. A programme was conducted to provide: (i) vocational training to run small-scale enterprises; and (ii) information on health and risky behaviors. The programme conducted, positively impacts behaviors on both economic and health margins. On economic margins, the intervention raises the likelihood that girls engage in income generating activities by 32 percent mainly driven by increased participation in self-employment. On health related margins, self-reported routine condom usage increases by 50 percent among the sexually active, and the probability of having a child decreases by 26 percent. Strikingly, the share of girls reporting sex against their will drops from 21 percent to almost zero. The findings suggest combined interventions might be more effective among adolescent girls than single-pronged interventions aiming to improve labor market outcomes solely through vocational training, or to change risky behaviors solely through education programmes.
en
dc.identifier
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/12/17385460/Empowering-adolescent-girls-evidence-from-a-randomized-control-trial-in-Uganda
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25529
dc.language
English
dc.language.iso
en_US
dc.publisher
World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder
World Bank
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.subject
ABILITY OF YOUNG
dc.subject
ADOLESCENT
dc.subject
ADOLESCENT DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject
ADOLESCENT GIRL
dc.subject
ADOLESCENT GIRLS
dc.subject
ADOLESCENT HEALTH
dc.subject
ADOLESCENTS
dc.subject
ADULTHOOD
dc.subject
AGE AT MARRIAGE
dc.subject
AGE AT MENARCHE
dc.subject
AGE COHORT
dc.subject
ANAL SEX
dc.subject
BABIES
dc.subject
BABY
dc.subject
BIRTHS
dc.subject
BOTH SEXES
dc.subject
CHILD BEARING
dc.subject
CHILD MARRIAGE
dc.subject
CHILD-BEARING
dc.subject
CHILDBEARING
dc.subject
CHILDBIRTH
dc.subject
CLASSROOM
dc.subject
COGNITIVE SKILLS
dc.subject
CONDOM
dc.subject
CONDOM USE
dc.subject
CONDOMS
dc.subject
CONTRACEPTION
dc.subject
CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS
dc.subject
CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE
dc.subject
CURRICULUM
dc.subject
DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS
dc.subject
DEPENDENCY RATIO
dc.subject
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
dc.subject
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
dc.subject
EARLY MARRIAGE
dc.subject
EARLY PREGNANCY
dc.subject
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY
dc.subject
EMPOWERMENT OF GIRLS
dc.subject
ENROLLMENT
dc.subject
ENROLLMENT RATES
dc.subject
ENTREPRENEURIAL SKILLS
dc.subject
ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING
dc.subject
EXPOSURE TO HEALTH RISKS
dc.subject
FAMILY MEMBERS
dc.subject
FAMILY PLANNING
dc.subject
FERTILITY
dc.subject
FERTILITY DROPS
dc.subject
FERTILITY RATES
dc.subject
FORMS OF CONTRACEPTION
dc.subject
GENDER RELATIONS
dc.subject
GENDER ROLES
dc.subject
GIRLS
dc.subject
GLOBAL POPULATION
dc.subject
HEALTH PROBLEMS
dc.subject
HEALTH RISKS
dc.subject
HERPES SIMPLEX VIRUS
dc.subject
HETEROSEXUAL INTERCOURSE
dc.subject
HIGHER LEVEL OF EDUCATION
dc.subject
HIV
dc.subject
HIV INFECTION
dc.subject
HIV INFECTIONS
dc.subject
HUMAN CAPITAL
dc.subject
IMPACT ON FERTILITY
dc.subject
IMPACT ON GIRLS
dc.subject
INFECTIONS
dc.subject
INFORMATION CAMPAIGNS
dc.subject
INTERVENTIONS
dc.subject
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
dc.subject
LABOR FORCE
dc.subject
LABOR MARKET
dc.subject
LABOR SUPPLY
dc.subject
LACK OF INFORMATION
dc.subject
LEADERSHIP
dc.subject
LEGAL RIGHTS
dc.subject
LEVEL OF EDUCATION
dc.subject
LIFE SKILLS
dc.subject
LIFE-SKILLS
dc.subject
LITERACY
dc.subject
LITERACY COURSES
dc.subject
LITERACY TRAINING
dc.subject
LIVELIHOOD SKILLS
dc.subject
MARRIED ADOLESCENT GIRLS
dc.subject
MENSTRUAL DISORDERS
dc.subject
MENSTRUATION
dc.subject
NEWBORN
dc.subject
NUMBER OF ADOLESCENTS
dc.subject
NUMBER OF BIRTHS
dc.subject
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
dc.subject
OLD GIRLS
dc.subject
OLDER GIRLS
dc.subject
OLDER MEN
dc.subject
PEER EDUCATION
dc.subject
POLICY MAKERS
dc.subject
PREGNANT WOMAN
dc.subject
PRIMARY DATA
dc.subject
PROVISION OF INFORMATION
dc.subject
RAPE
dc.subject
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
dc.subject
READING
dc.subject
RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES
dc.subject
RELATIONS WITH MEN
dc.subject
RELATIONSHIPS WITH MEN
dc.subject
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
dc.subject
RETURNS TO EDUCATION
dc.subject
RISKY BEHAVIOR
dc.subject
RISKY SEX
dc.subject
RURAL AREAS
dc.subject
RURAL LOCATIONS
dc.subject
SAFER SEX
dc.subject
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
dc.subject
SCHOOL DROP
dc.subject
SCHOOL DROP-OUTS
dc.subject
SCHOOL ENROLLMENT
dc.subject
SCHOOL ENROLMENT
dc.subject
SCHOOL GOING
dc.subject
SCHOOLING
dc.subject
SCHOOLS
dc.subject
SECONDARY SCHOOL
dc.subject
SERVICE DELIVERY
dc.subject
SEX
dc.subject
SEX WORK
dc.subject
SEX WORKERS
dc.subject
SEXUAL ACTIVITY
dc.subject
SEXUAL BEHAVIORS
dc.subject
SEXUAL RELATIONS
dc.subject
SEXUALLY ACTIVE
dc.subject
SHORT-TERM RELATIONSHIPS
dc.subject
SKILL TRAINING
dc.subject
SKILLS TRAINING
dc.subject
SOCIAL NORMS
dc.subject
SOCIAL UNREST
dc.subject
SPILLOVER
dc.subject
TEACHING
dc.subject
TEEN
dc.subject
TEEN PREGNANCIES
dc.subject
TEEN PREGNANCY
dc.subject
TEENAGE GIRLS
dc.subject
TEENAGE PREGNANCIES
dc.subject
TEENAGE PREGNANCY
dc.subject
TRAINING COURSES
dc.subject
TRAINING PROGRAMS
dc.subject
UNEMPLOYMENT
dc.subject
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
dc.subject
UNPROTECTED SEX
dc.subject
URBAN AREAS
dc.subject
VAGINAL SEX
dc.subject
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
dc.subject
VOCATIONAL SKILLS
dc.subject
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
dc.subject
YOUNG GIRLS
dc.subject
YOUNG PEOPLE
dc.subject
YOUNG WOMEN
dc.subject
YOUNGER GIRLS
dc.subject
YOUTH
dc.subject
YOUTH POPULATION
dc.subject
YOUTH POPULATIONS
dc.subject
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
dc.subject
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
dc.subject
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
dc.title
Empowering Adolescent Girls
en
dc.title.subtitle
Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial in Uganda
en
dc.type
Working Paper
en
okr.date.disclosure
2013-02-26
okr.doctype
Publications & Research
okr.doctype
Publications & Research :: Working Paper
okr.docurl
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/12/17385460/Empowering-adolescent-girls-evidence-from-a-randomized-control-trial-in-Uganda
okr.googlescholar.linkpresent
yes
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum
000442464_20130226115012
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum
17385460
okr.identifier.report
75566
okr.imported
true
okr.language.supported
en
okr.pdfurl
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/543691468309340444/pdf/755660WP0Empow00Box374337B00PUBLIC0.pdf
en
okr.region.administrative
Africa
okr.region.country
Uganda
okr.topic
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Adolescent Health
okr.topic
Social Protections and Labor :: Vocational & Technical Education
okr.topic
Private Sector Development :: Small and Medium Size Enterprises
okr.topic
Education :: Education For All
okr.topic
Gender :: Gender and Health
okr.unit
AFT: PREM Front Office (AFTPM)

Mostrar el registro sencillo de la publicación



Este ítem aparece en la(s) siguiente(s) colección(ones)