Published on World Bank Voices

Data for policy: Building a culture of evidence-based policies to address violence against children

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Interviewers training for data collection for Violence Against Children Surveys (VACS) in Honduras. ©  Andrés Villaveces, CDC
Interviewers training for data collection for Violence Against Children Surveys (VACS) in Honduras. ©  Andrés Villaveces, CDC

Good policy starts with good data, which is why the work of Together for Girls (TfG) begins with nationally representative Violence Against Children Surveys (VACS), led by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as part of the TfG partnership. The VACS generate data on prevalence and incidence of physical, sexual, and emotional violence as well as risk and protective factors, consequences of violence, and access to services. VACS have generated data for almost 10% of the world’s youth population (aged 13–24). VACS data catalyzes and informs national action to prevent and respond to violence. With strong data to guide the way, national governments lead the development and implementation of a comprehensive multi-sector policy and programmatic response to violence against children (VAC). 

To date, seven countries have developed comprehensive, multi-sectoral responses to prevent and respond to VAC as the result of VACS surveys. The experience of every VACS country that has developed a national response is slightly different, but strengthening research capacity and institutional capacity building, especially intra-government agency coordination and external stakeholders, are two recurring issues. This is especially important and relevant within the multi-sectoral task force, the government entity responsible for developing a coordinated, multi-sector national action plan on violence prevention and response.
 
Building a culture of gender-responsive and evidence-based policymaking

With funds received from the SVRI WBG Development Marketplace Award for Innovation on GBV Prevention and Response, TfG, in collaboration with the CDC, is piloting a Data-to-Policy Fellowship in Honduras, the latest TfG country to complete data collection for the VACS. The fellowship is part of TfG’s broader effort to promote evidence-based policies and programs to address VAC and support governments undergoing the VACS initiative.
 
The Data-to-Policy Fellowship provides training and mentorship to a member of the multi-sectoral task force for one year, from October 2017 to September 2018. A solid understanding of the VACS is critical to ensuring that the data is used and integrated effectively into the country’s policy and programmatic response. The fellowship curriculum will include VACS methodology and data analysis. We also want the Fellow to know, based on the best available evidence, what works to prevent and respond to VAC. The World Health Organization-led INSPIRE: Seven Strategies for Ending Violence Against Children, a set of evidence-based strategies with the greatest potential to reduce violence against children, and the forthcoming INSPIRE implementation handbooks and monitoring framework are a fundamental part of the Fellowship training.
 
CDC, TfG and global experts in the field of VAC, violence against women (VAW) and community violence will provide ongoing mentorship. We work at the intersection of VAC and VAW and are committed to bringing attention to adolescent girls who often remain invisible or fall through the cracks in the development of policies and programs to end VAC and VAW. We will work closely with the Fellow to make sure that the country's policies and programs are gender-responsive.
 
TfG and CDC identified the fellowship awardee through a consultative process with in-country partners. The Data-to-Policy Fellow leads several initiatives of the Sub Secretary for Security in Prevention, the lead agency of the multi-sectoral task force, and has a background in violence prevention and VAW.
 
Measuring Change at the National and Local Level
 
The goal of the fellowship is to strengthen research capacity, coordination and policymaking so that the multi-sectoral task force can lead the development of a comprehensive, evidence-based national response to VAC. Countries that have done so have successfully:   

  • Expanded multi-sector child protection teams at the district level and established a national hotline and communication campaigns. (Tanzania)
  • Conducted a landmark costing study, added curricula in parenting and positive discipline in schools, and reached over 10,000 vulnerable children with social protection interventions. (Cambodia)
  • Provided empowerment and self-defense training, developed by No Means No Worldwide in partnership with the Ministry of Education, to 16,080 adolescent girls and 4,980 adolescent boys in seven districts received empowerment and self-defense training. (Malawi)   
Ultimately, we want to see national action that leads to real changes in Honduras, like the ones mentioned above. TfG will be monitoring intermediate results to make sure we are on track to achieve our end goal. Intermediate results include an institutional mapping of the work being done in Honduras, strengthening understanding of VACS methodology and analysis within the multi-sectoral task force, integration of VACS findings into the draft VAC national action plan, and the use of INSPIRE as a framework for the national action plan. 
 
TfG is committed to bridging the gap between data and action and supporting government-led, national action across sectors to prevent and respond to VAC.
 
Together for Girls (TfG) is a partnership between national governments, UN agencies and private sector organizations, working at the intersection of violence against children (VAC) and violence against women (VAW), with special attention to sexual violence against girls. TfG works across three pillars of action : Nationally representative Violence Against Children Surveys (VACS), led by CDC as part of the TfG partnership; Nationally-led multi-sectoral VAC prevention and response, global advocacy and awareness-raising. Founded in 2009, TfG is now active in more than 20 countries.

Authors

Begoña Fernandez

Begoña Fernandez, Technical Officer at Together for Girls (TfG)

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