8 results on '"Melnikas, A. J."'
Search Results
2. Child marriage practices among the Rohingya in Bangladesh
- Author
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Melnikas, Andrea J., Ainul, Sigma, Ehsan, Iqbal, Haque, Eashita, and Amin, Sajeda
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- 2020
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3. Do Child Marriage Programs Help Girls Weather Shocks Like COVID‐19? Evidence from the More Than Brides Alliance Intervention.
- Author
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Melnikas, Andrea J., Saul, Grace, Pandey, Neelanjana, Makino, Momoe, Amin, Sajeda, and Chau, Michelle
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CHILD marriage ,BRIDES ,COVID-19 ,TEENAGE girls ,WEATHER - Abstract
This paper contributes to the evidence base on the impact of the COVID‐19 on child marriage prevalence and on the protective potential of girl‐centred, community‐level interventions in buffering communities against aggregate shocks. Drawing on data from repeat cross‐sectional surveys completed with adolescent girls aged 12–19 in 609 villages in four states in India as a part of the More Than Brides Alliance impact evaluation, we examine whether the intervention appears to have impacted child marriage prevalence over its 5‐year implementation period, whether the onset of COVID‐19 affected ongoing trends in child marriage prevalence, and whether the intervention appeared to have buffered against increased child marriage risk resulting from the pandemic. Results show that significant differences emerged between treatment and control villages between midline and endline—and these differences were larger following the onset of COVID‐19—suggesting both that the treatment was successful in preventing child marriage and that the intervention had a protective effect. Results suggest that girl‐centred, community‐based interventions can help communities to weather environmental shocks and protect girls against potential increased child marriage risk during times of acute crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Community-based empowerment program to delay marriage: Results from the More Than Brides Alliance intervention in India, Malawi, Mali and Niger.
- Author
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Melnikas, Andrea J., Saul, Grace, Chau, Michelle, Pandey, Neelanajana, Gueye, Mouhamadou, Mkandawire, James, Diarra, Aissa, and Amin, Sajeda
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MARRIAGE , *COMMUNITY-based programs , *BRIDES , *CLUSTER randomized controlled trials , *CHILD marriage - Abstract
The More Than Brides Alliance (MTBA) implemented an intervention in India, Malawi, Mali and Niger from 2017 to 2020. The holistic community-based program included girls' clubs focused on empowerment and sexual and reproductive health knowledge; work with parents and educators; community edutainment events; and local-, regional-, and national-level advocacy efforts related to child marriage. Using a cluster randomized trial design (India and Malawi), and a matched comparison design (Niger and Mali), we evaluated the effectiveness of the program on age at marriage among girls ages 12–19 in intervention communities. Repeat cross sectional surveys were collected at baseline (2016/7), midline after approximately 18 months of intervention (2018), and endline (2020). Impact was assessed using difference-in-difference (DID) analysis, adjusted for the cluster design. We find that the intervention was successful at reducing the proportion of girls ages 12–19 married in India (-0.126, p <.001). Findings in the other countries did not show impact of the intervention on delaying marriage. Our findings suggest that the MTBA program was optimized to succeed in India, in part because it was built on an evidence base that relies heavily on data from South Asia. The drivers of child marriage in India may be substantially different from those in Malawi, Mali, and Niger and require alternate intervention approaches. These findings have implications for those designing programs outside of South Asia and suggest that programs need to consider context-specific drivers and whether and how evidence-based programs operate in relation to those drivers. Trial registration: This work is part of an RCT registered August 4, 2016 in the AEA RCT registry identified as: AEAR CTR-0001463. See: https://www.socialscienceregistry.org/trials/1463. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. A conceptual framework for understanding child marriage, marriage markets, and marriageability.
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Melnikas, Andrea J., Saul, Grace, Pandey, Neelanjana, Gueye, Mouhamadou, Mkandawire, James, Diarra, Aissa, and Amin, Sajeda
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MARRIAGE & psychology ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,MARKETING ,QUALITATIVE research ,SPOUSES ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Copyright of African Journal of Reproductive Health is the property of Women's Health & Action Research Centre and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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6. What Are the Drivers of Child Marriage? A Conceptual Framework to Guide Policies and Programs.
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Psaki, Stephanie R., Melnikas, Andrea J., Haque, Eashita, Saul, Grace, Misunas, Christina, Patel, Sangram K., Ngo, Thoai, and Amin, Sajeda
- Abstract
The child marriage field lacks a simplified framework that connects an understanding of the drivers of child marriage for girls to decisions about the design of interventions to delay marriage within different contexts and support married girls. We reviewed existing child marriage frameworks and conducted consultations with experts working on child marriage. We then developed a simplified conceptual framework describing the key drivers of child marriage for girls. We explored how these drivers play out and interact using qualitative data from three settings where child marriage is common: Bangladesh, Malawi, and Niger. The final conceptual framework lays out five core drivers of child marriage for girls, which vary and interact across contexts. Social norms and poverty are shown as core drivers that underlie lack of agency, lack of opportunity, and pregnancy/fear of pregnancy. These drivers reflect community, household, and individual-level factors. The case studies highlight the important relationships between these drivers, and the way they interact within each context. We use these examples to explore how policymakers and practitioners might identify the most appropriate interventions to address child marriage across different settings. We offer this framework as a starting point to guide more targeted interventions and policies that address the complex combination of child marriage drivers within each setting. By adapting this framework to different settings, those designing and implementing child marriage prevention interventions can identify the key drivers in each setting, understand how those drivers interact, and more effectively target effective interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Voice Without Choice? Investigating Adolescent Girls' Agency in Marital Decision-making in Niger.
- Author
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Saul, Grace, Diarra, Aïssa, Melnikas, Andrea J., and Amin, Sajeda
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TEENAGE girls ,CHILD marriage ,SOCIAL norms ,DECISION making ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
This article uses qualitative data from Niger to examine adolescent girls' perceptions of their own agency in marriage decisions and contextual factors influencing these perceptions. We find that girls make marital decisions within a context that stresses parental consent and community approval, places a high value on obedience, and is constrained by limited opportunities, gendered distribution of labor, and dominant social norms promoting an early and narrow 'window of opportunity' for marriage. Findings demonstrate that interventions aiming to delay marriage in Niger must work to influence both community norms supporting child marriage and girls' own motivations in martial decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Adolescent girls' migration and its impact on early marriage: Qualitative findings in Mali.
- Author
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Engebretsen, Sarah, Gueye, Mouhamadou, Melnikas, Andrea J., Fofana, Sékou, Fané, Bourama, and Amin, Sajeda
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TEENAGE girls ,CHILD marriage ,SOCIAL impact ,MARITAL relations ,SOCIAL influence ,BIRD ecology - Abstract
Adolescent girls in West Africa are migrating in search of educational and livelihood opportunities. In Mali, early marriage (before the legal age of 16) is a common practice. This paper builds on prior research on female migration that focused on the direct influences of migration on marriage and explores the wider social impact of rising female migration in sending communities by examining direct and indirect effects and intended and unintended consequences. This study examines perceptions about migration among girls and their parents including how it influences marital timing, marriage preparations, marriage practices, and marital relations. Qualitative data were collected from 140 adolescent girls and 115 parents of adolescent girls in rural areas in focus group discussions (FGDs) (n = 31) and in-depth interviews (IDIs) (n = 41) to inform how girls' migration patterns might influence program recruitment strategies and content for an intervention aimed at addressing early marriage in Mali. Our findings concur with earlier studies that migration has direct effects on marriage because it allows girls to both avoid early marriage and prepare for marriage through the assembly of goods and wares to bring to their conjugal homes. Despite some of the perceived risks of migration on marriage, the indirect effects of migration include allowing girls to see different types of marriage practices and marital relationships between husbands and wives and potentially allowing migrant girls to exert more influence over the marital process compared to non-migrants. However, migration can expose girls to new ideas and alternatives that may be incongruent with cultural expectations for them once they return to their communities. This study suggests that migration is seen as an inevitable part of life for many adolescent girls in Mali. Girls who migrate may return to their villages with not only items or income that provide direct benefits to a marriage, but also viewpoints on the expectations for women and girls in their communities that indirectly influence marital relationships. Although this can be challenging for individual returned girls in terms of reintegration, these new expectations may, over time, lead to social changes that influence migrants and non-migrants. Program strategies and approaches must consider the possibility of migration as an important aspect of every adolescent girl's opportunity structure. The qualitative data suggests that certain skills are critical for adolescent girls. Programs should emphasize the acquisition of relevant skills such as communication, risk assessment, negotiation and money management in ways that are relevant for migrants and non-migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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