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KNOWLEDGEHUB
ADOLESCENT GIRLS INITIATIVE-KENYA

REDUCING RISKS FOR ADOLESCENT GIRLS IN KENYA

Your complete source on everything AGI-K! Our goal is to make all materials on a programme easily accessible in one place. If you are aware of additional resources, please contact us.

Adolescent Girls Initiative-Kenya (AGI-K) was designed to reduce the risks and vulnerabilities faced by adolescent girls in Kenya by promoting violence prevention, health and well-being, and economic empowerment. The programme increases health education and develops livelihoods and life skills at the individual level, as well as shifts harmful social norms that increase the risk of violence at the community level.

The full intervention includes all of the following components:

  • Violence prevention: community dialogues on the causes and consequences of violence against girls, as well as funded community projects
  • Education: conditional cash transfers to encourage school enrolment
  • Health: weekly safe spaces for groups of girls led by a female mentor using a health, life skills, and nutrition curriculum
  • Wealth creation: financial education sessions and activities such as opening bank accounts

A randomised controlled trial compared four packages of interventions:

01 only the violence prevention component
02 the violence prevention and education components
03 the violence prevention, education, and health components
04 the full intervention (the violence prevention, education, health, and wealth creation components).

The evaluation showed that AGI-K did not reduce girls’ experience of violence but did improve their retention in school, confidence, and household economic status, as well as delayed childbearing.

AGI-K was implemented by the Population Council, the African Population and Health Research Center, Save the Children, and Plan International. If you want to adapt the programme, we strongly recommend that you contact them first.

KEY INSIGHTS
  • Interventions that address education, health, and economic empowerment at the individual, household, and community levels can benefit girls by tackling complex needs in a holistic manner.
  • Compared to single-component interventions, multicomponent interventions can be more cost-effective.
  • Group-based empowerment programmes may need a longer time frame for implementation to sustain impact.
  • Cash transfers can contribute to positive educational outcomes and to delaying pregnancy.

IF SOMEONE WRONGS ME, I AM FREE TO TELL THEM THAT IT IS LIKE THIS OR THAT. IN THE PAST I WASN’T FREE TO TALK TO SOMEONE LIKE THAT.

ADOLESCENT GIRL, KIBERA

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