Access to Social Protection Minimum Floors as a tool to end early marriage in Mozambique

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31273/LGD.2018.2104

Keywords:

Early marriage, Social protection floors, Inclusive development, Gender empowerment

Abstract

Mozambique has the seventh highest early marriage prevalence rate in the world, notwithstanding there being a legal ban. Early marriage generally affects girls who are the least educated, poor and living in rural areas. This situation is a reflection of the gendered socialization process in Mozambique, which places girls in caregiving and reproductive roles. Recently, legal research on early marriage has gained importance in Mozambique. This article demonstrates that social protection floors (SPFs) can be a tool to empower girls. SPFs should be designed to capture substantive inequality in the household and increase protection for girls, in
order to reduce early marriage rates.

Author Biographies

  • Farida Mamad

    Farida Mamad is a Ph.D. student in law at Hasselt University (Belgium), a Human Rights and International
    Law teacher at the Universidade Eduardo Mondlane (Mozambique) and a law clerk at the Supreme Court
    of Mozambique.

  • Petra Foubert

    Petra Foubert is a Professor of Law at Hasselt University (Belgium) and a member of the Leuven Bar
    (Belgium). She studied law at Antwerp University and KU Leuven and obtained an LL.M. from Harvard
    Law School (USA).

References

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Published

2018-06-06