Work with and for adolescent girls
Work with and for adolescent girls
Case Studies
In Nigeria, Spotlight programme has implemented the STEAM Flagship for Women and Girls, an integrated approach and good practice for developing life skills through “21st century entrepreneurship training” for women and girl survivors of violence, including those who have suffered harmful practices. STEAM stands for SRHR information; Technology skills for sales and marketing; Ending VAWG and harmful practices information; Accounting and business management skills; Manufacturing and start-up support. Women and girls in the programme received training as peer educators on sexual and reproductive health and rights, ending VAWG and harmful practices, as well as accounting and business management. So far, the programme has empowered 24 girls and young women with skills, start-up equipment, and supplies to gainfully establish bag-making businesses.
“I’ve learnt to manage sexual relationships and to talk to my parents and friends about the different types of sexual, emotional and physical violence that women suffer in Haiti.” - 18-year-old adolescent girl participant of AFASDA weekly meetings, Mont-Organisé, Haiti.
Another Spotlight programme that is working to equip women and girls with tangible life skills is in Haiti, where the educational model Girl’s Space aims to help adolescent girls and young women to build resiliency and life skills to help prevent domestic violence. By participating in weekly meetings, the girls improved their knowledge of violence and health risks, including zero tolerance towards violence, as well as services available to support them. Mothers of participants reported that their daughters’ attitudes and behaviour had changed, and that they were becoming more responsible. This is a collaborative local initiative in the Northeast of the country with the organisation Asosyasyon Fanm Solèy Dayiti (AFASDA) that has been implemented across six municipalities, with forty-two Girls Spaces providing support to more than 9000 adolescents aged 10-19 over the past 3 years.
In Kyrgyzstan, Spotlight programme used a mobile game, “Mystery of Sary Kol”, to raise awareness of the dangers of child marriage, reaching over 39,000 players. This game was developed as a follow-up to the successfully designed and launched “Spring in Bishkek” mobile game in 2021, which focused on forced marriage. Both games were jointly designed with adolescent girls.
According to a survey of players of “Mystery of Sary Kol”, the game has significantly influenced players’ beliefs that child marriage is a crime (86% of players), improved the willingness of players to help a friend who encounters a forced marriage (86%) and made girls more confident that they can engage in constructive dialogue to convince their parents to refuse the marriage (61%). According to the same survey, 80% of girls noted that the game had taught them a lot and the game provoked thinking; 52% said they learned about child marriage and places to turn to for help; and 82% noted that the game increased girls’ confidence on the importance of independent decision-making.
Read more about the Mystery of Sary Kol here.
In Niger, following the successful African Girls Summit in 2021, the feminist organisation "Fada de Filles" (Girls’ Fada) was founded with the support of Spotlight Initiative. A “Fada’’ is a traditional community space used for dialogue and speech, decision-making and solidarity, normally reserved for men and boys. These spaces are used to take collective decisions on community dynamics and how communities function. In the spirit of peer-to-peer mentoring, the concept of the Fada des Filles emerged from the need for girls to appropriate these spaces and contribute to transforming social norms for a more favourable environment for the advancement of their rights.
The Fada des Filles is composed of 30 young women from a variety of professional and university backgrounds who have benefited from capacity-building sessions supported by the Spotlight Initiative programme in Niger. Utilising the skills gained in these sessions, the women raise awareness, publicly advocate for social norm change and serve as role models and “elders” for other young girls and boys. The Fada des Filles led talks on themes related to female genital mutilation, gender-based violence, climate change and the environment, disaster risk reduction and menstrual hygiene management, positioning gender equality at the heart of solutions to these challenges. In total, the talks reached 2,457 people (including 1,972 girls and 574 female students).
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