Published By: Plan InternationalPlan International’s commitment to tackle discrimination and exclusion and advance children’s rights
and equality for girls lies at the heart of our new Organisational Purpose. Our ambition to tackle the
drivers of exclusion and gender inequality is in response to the fact that in most of the countries and
communities in which Plan works, entrenched gender inequality, discrimination against girls and
women, and son preference continue to exist. These affect the care and access to services and
opportunities provided to girls, right from birth.
This paper aims to respond to the fact that Early Childhood Development initiatives and programmes,
both internal and external, often appear to give limited attention to gender inequality and discrimination.
Furthermore, initiatives to promote girls’ rights and gender equality often pay little attention to early
childhood, instead focusing on older girls and adolescents. There is no question that the most
significant gender-specific rights violations and gaps usually affect older girls, adolescents and young
women. Added to this, global-level data does not indicate significant differences between girls and boys
in terms of infant mortality, under-five malnutrition or enrolment in pre-school, while in the countries with
available data, girls and boys are roughly equally at risk of experiencing violent punishment from
caregivers in the home.
1, 2 But if we focus just on the global data, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that
in many communities and right from birth, gender discrimination affects girls disproportionally –
and girls’ chances to realise their rights and to live a life of dignity. It also sets up boys for a life of
harmful notions of masculinity
Author(s): Plan International | Posted on: Jan 22, 2018 | Views() | Download (114)