Girls Rights Programme

Thirty years after global leaders adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child, millions of girls lack rights and protections needed to thrive.

Thirty years after global leaders adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child, millions of girls lack rights and protections needed to thrive.

Thirty years after global leaders promised to protect the rights of girls, millions are not in school, face poverty, exploitation, violence, neglect, and abuse. Thirty years of child rights, and the unfinished agenda, says it is time for the global community to fulfil the broken promises of the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child (UN CRC).

Fighting for Girls Rights

There has been remarkable progress for children since the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, but we cannot overlook the millions of girls who have been left behind. It is the most vulnerable girls the world overlooks – those facing extreme poverty, the young living in fragile states, refugees, and girls with disabilities. When it comes to translating commitments into lasting change, we have fallen short and we must do better. This is a moral, legal and economic failure that the world can ill afford.

Lack of investment in girls

Global statistics reflect the challenges that remain. Each year:

  • Over 5 million children mostly girls die from preventable causes, and nearly half of these deaths are attributable to undernutrition;
  • 95,000 children a year – 70% of them boys – are murdered, and 15 million girls report experiencing forced sex;
  • And 64 million children in particular girls lack access to primary education.

The key factors that contribute to the gaps in progress, including a lack of investment in services that are critically important for girls. For example, most countries fall well short on spending the 5-6% of GDP to ensure universal coverage of essential health care. And foreign aid, which many of the poorest countries rely on, is falling short in critical areas such as health and education for grils.

Another factor is the lack of quality data. Governments tend to rely on data that reflects national averages, making it difficult to identify the needs of specific girls and to monitor progress.  Disaggregation of data by gender, age, disability and locality, is increasingly important as many rights violations are concentrated amongst disadvantaged groups of children especially grils.

Governments must listen to girl child

AHO is calling on governments to embrace and act on all parts of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. This must include:

  • Implementing legislation, policies, budgets, and programmes that are inclusive of all children especially girls;
  • Promoting the rights of all marginalised girls and championing gender equality;
  • And supporting girls’ meaningful participation and upholding their rights to freedom of expression and opinion.

Giving girls a real voice and listening to and heeding their views will be crucial for progress. Girls are still widely treated as passive recipients of decisions taken by adults, despite that fact that girls’ right to participate is one of the core principles of the UN CRC. Barriers exist at every level of society, from a lack of recognition in law and policy; limited adult capacity to facilitate child participation in meaningful ways; and a lack of access to justice for girls needing to challenge violations of their rights.

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