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Listening to Young Lives at Work in Vietnam: Second Call

Abstract This brief report provides headline findings from the second of the 3 calls in Young Lives at Work’s COVID-19 Phone Survey in Vietnam The young people in our study were contacted by phone between August and October to find out about the continuing impact of the pandemic on their health, well-being, economic circumstances, education and work. Headlines from the first call are available here. The third call is now underway and the findings will be published in early 2021. Additional statistical and summary tables from the second phone survey are available. Citation Le Thuc Duc, D. Scott, Annina Hittmeyer, Favara M, C Porter, “Listening to Young Lives at Work in Vietnam: Second Call”, Young Lives, November 2020

Continuity and change: Marriage and Parenthood Among Ethiopian Adolescents

Abstract With changes brought about by education and urbanisation, adolescents and young people in Ethiopia have a greater say compared to previous generations in decisions about who, how and when they marry. Yet, despite this, customary and patriarchal norms still regulate marriage processes and practices, especially in rural areas, constraining girls’ and young women’s choices. This new report examines the changes in marriage practice in Ethiopia and explores the lived experience of married adolescents. It argues that despite important initiatives and government interventions to prevent child marriage and delay early marriage, for the well-being of adolescent boys and especially girls, policy and programmes should pay more attention to the views, needs and rights of the millions of young people in Ethiopia who have already experienced early marriage, cohabitation, separation or divorce.

Listening to Young Lives at Work in Vietnam

Young Marriage, Parenthood and Divorce in Zambia

Young Marriage, Parenthood and Divorce in Zambia This research documents the experiences of young Zambians who are married or cohabiting before the age of 18 From: Abstract Zambian law prohibits marriage under 21 but the practice, driven by circumstance, stubbornly persists, albeit increasingly as informal cohabitations which are inseparable from pregnancy and parenthood. For many adolescents, who lack the experience, emotional maturity and financial resources to cope, they are a complex and challenging experience, rarely investigated until now. New research, published as part of Young Lives’ and Child Frontiers multi country Young Marriage and Parenthood Study (YMAPS), documents the experiences of young Zambians who are married or cohabiting before the age of 18 and of many who became parents in their teens. It exposes the challenges they face as they navigate these adult roles and responsibilities. The authors identify what support these young people need in order to

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