Basic Profile of Child Marriage in Burkina Faso
This brief has provided a basic profile of child marriage in Burkina Faso. Measures of child marriage are high. The share of women ages 18-22 who married as children is 49.8 percent and it has not declined substantially over time. The share of girls marrying very early, before the age of 15, has also not changed much (it has increased slightly versus 25 years ago). Child marriage is associated with lower wealth, lower education levels, and higher labor force participation. These are however only correlations, not necessarily causal effects. Other briefs in this series look at potential causal effects.
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Brief biblioteca |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2016-03
|
Subjects: | LITERACY, KNOWLEDGE, NUMBER OF GIRLS, AGE OF MARRIAGE, CHILDREN, EDUCATION, GIRLS EDUCATION, POLICIES, POPULATION KNOWLEDGE, CHILD, DROPOUTS, HOUSEHOLDS, VALUES, WOMAN, CHILD MARRIAGE, AGE, LAWS, MEN, FIRST MARRIAGE, ABILITY, GROUPS, POPULATION, LEVELS OF EDUCATION, LAW, GIRLS, LABOR FORCE, STUDENTS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, PRIMARY EDUCATION, FERTILITY, MARRIAGE, WOMEN, PRIMARY SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR RESEARCH ON WOMEN, NUTRITION, RESIDENCE, EARLY MARRIAGE, SECONDARY EDUCATION, DEVELOPMENT GOALS, RURAL GIRLS, WILL, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, BULLETIN, HEALTH RISKS, POLICY, OLDER WOMEN, INEQUALITY, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/595371468194959538/Basic-profile-of-child-marriage-in-Burkina-Faso https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25473 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | This brief has provided a basic profile
of child marriage in Burkina Faso. Measures of child
marriage are high. The share of women ages 18-22 who married
as children is 49.8 percent and it has not declined
substantially over time. The share of girls marrying very
early, before the age of 15, has also not changed much (it
has increased slightly versus 25 years ago). Child marriage
is associated with lower wealth, lower education levels, and
higher labor force participation. These are however only
correlations, not necessarily causal effects. Other briefs
in this series look at potential causal effects. |
---|