Preventing Child Marriage
ICRW is a leader among organizations advocating for the United States to become more involved in curbing child marriage. ICRW is working with the U.S. Congress and the administration to raise the profile of this issue and bring more national and international support to end this harmful traditional practice.
On May 24, 2012, the United States Senate passed the International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act (S.414). The bill was passed unanimously by voice vote, demonstrating strong bipartisan support for an end to child marriage, a practice that denies 14 million girls a year their rights to health, education and security.
The legislation contains the same provisions that unanimously passed the Senate in 2010. The legislation would authorize U.S. foreign assistance funding to prevent child marriage and provide educational and economic opportunities to girls in the developing world. The policy would help protect girls’ human rights by:
- Establishing a multi-year strategy to prevent child marriage in developing countries and promote the empowerment of girls at risk of child marriage
- Requiring the State Department to report on this harmful practice in its annual human rights report
- Integrating child marriage prevention efforts into existing development programs
ICRW has advocated for the passage of the child marriage prevention bill since 2006, and continues to work with Congress and the administration to find evidence-based solutions to this gross human rights violation.