NL-KVK-41201463-PINSO003
Save the Children Netherlands
Marriage: No Child's Play India
What - a 5 year programme (2016-2020) to reduce child marriage and its adverse effects on young women and girls. Where - India, Pakistan, Malawi, Niger and Mali. The prevalence of child marriage is high in all of these countries. Niger has the highest rate of child marriage in the world. Every 3 in 4 girls marry before their 18th birthday (76%), whereas India has the highest number of child brides in the world. More than 10 million women aged 20 to 24 years old are married before the age of 15. Within countries, we will aim to target geographic “hotspots” with high proportions and numbers of girls at risk of child marriage. This includes rural and hard to reach communities. With Whom - Working closely together as an alliance with in-country governmental and non-governmental partners, the four alliance members, Save the Children the Netherlands, Oxfam Novib, Simavi and Population Council, will coordinate with other Dutch, international (UNICEF and UNFPA) and national programmes aimed at reducing child marriage and collaborate with the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign affairs and its embassies. Where possible, we will align our advocacy work with Girls not Brides. theory of Change and strategies - The MTBA will work in countries where child marriage prevalence is an important impediment to achieving adolescent wellbeing. The two crucial components of the Theory of Change that we will apply in each country include girls’ empowerment and changing harmful customs, traditions, norms and practices. To ensure structural cross-sectoral prevention and response towards girls at risk of early marriage and already married, we will strengthen child protection systems in countries where this is opportune. We will advocate for the development or amendment of laws, policies and/or action plans and the implementation thereof.
1. Empowering at risk-, and already married adolescents, girls in particular, with life skills education (LSE), CSE and SRHR information. We will strengthen adolescents' protective assets and equip them with knowledge and skills to navigate the challenges and opportunities in the transitions from puberty to adulthood. 2. Providing alternatives to child marriage and mitigate the impact on married girls, through enhancing access to education-, economic opportunities-, and child protection systems for girls and their families. 3. Increasing access to SRHR services for young people. To achieve outcome 3, SRHR services need to be available, affordable, acceptable and appropriate. Communities need to allow unmarried and married young people to access SRH services, and healthcare providers need to be able to deliver quality youth-friendly SRHR services. Young people can be linked to services through outreach and voucher systems. 4. Changing social norms. Challenging harmful customs, traditions, norms and practices is crucial in addressing child marriage. 5. Influencing legal and policy frameworks. A supportive policy and legal environment is crucial to our cause.
Girls at risk of child marriage and married girls and their family members.
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
+ 31 (0) 70 338 44 48
info@savethechildren.nl
https://www.savethechildren.nl/
418718
800503
761779
573591
335931
2890523
782773
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
1419115
Cumulative incoming funds to Q2 2018
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
669893
Incoming funds to Q1 2019
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
1015000
Disbursement to SC India
615000
Disbursement type expenditures to Q4 2018
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
615000
Disbursement to SC India Q4 2019
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
416394
Incoming funds from SCNL lead Q1 2020
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
22119
Transfer to SC India Q1 2021
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
615000
Disbursement to SC India Q1 2018
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
Outcome 6: Increased engagement and collective action against CM and in support of ASRHR
OC6.1: % girls who believe in gender equitable values
Baseline values, Midline values and endline values are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 (baseline) & July-Sept, 2018 (Midline) and Sep-dec 2020 (endline) in intervention areas where Simvai and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project. Calculations are based on intervention areas only
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
OC6.2: # documented cases of community driven collective action and engagement of the community against CM and in support of ASRHR
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
No baseline was taken
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Output 7 : Supportive rights-based legal and policy environment against CM
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OP7.1: # alternative policy approaches on SRHR/CM presented by MTBA partners to duty bearers and influencers of governments, global governmental actors and the private sector
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OP7.4: # law enforcement officers, judicial officers and legal aid lawyers trained by the project on child marriage laws and legislations and gender sensitivity
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reporting from 2016-2020
Outcome 1: Young people are better informed about SRHR including adverse effects of CM and empowered to voice needs and rights
Baseline values, Midline values and Endline values for indicators OC 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.6, and 1.7 are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 (baseline) & July-Sept, 2018 (Midline) and Sept-Dec 2020 (endline) in intervention areas where Simavi and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project. Calculations are based on intervention areas only
OC1.1: % girls with basic correct knowledge on SRHR
Girls who have heard about HIV/Aids, know at least 3 contraception methods, and know that menstruation is not a disease Includes ever married, never-married and ages 12 - 20 Baseline values and Midline values are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 in intervention areas where Oxfam-Novib and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project (Oxfam-Novib: Segou; Save the Children: Sikasso). Calculations are based on intervention areas only
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council Baseline-Midline-Endline evaluation
This is the midline value
OC1.2: % girls, who know and can tell the legal minimum age at marriage for girls.
Girls who know legal minimum age for marriage - India-- 18 Includes never and ever married, ages 12-20
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council Baseline-Midline-Endline evaluation
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
OC1.3: % of girls, who can name at least THREE adverse effects of marriage before [legal age of marriage]
girls who can list at least 3 adverse effect of underage marriage (from the list identified or other) Includes ever married, never-married and ages 12 - 20
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council Baseline-Midline-Endline evaluation
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
OC1.4: % (ever) married girls who say they did not want to marry
girls who say somebody else chose their husband for them and they did not agree
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council Baseline-Midline-Endline evaluation
This is midline value collected from India
This is the endline value
OC1.6: % girls, who feel empowered to voice their needs and rights regarding CM and SRHR
girls who can disagree with their parents or husband (depending on marital status) about decisions affecting them Includes ever married, never-married and ages 12 - 20
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council Baseline-Midline-Endline evaluation
This is the midline value
OC1.7: % girls who started menstruating, with basic knowledge about menstruation
girls who knew about menstruation before it happened and know when they are more likely to get pregnant Includes ever married, never-married and ages 12 - 20
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council Baseline-Midline-Endline evaluation
This is the midline value
OC1.5: # number of girls who have convinced their parents to delay a marriage
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
Baseline was not taken
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Output 3: Increased access to economic opportunities for girls at risk and affected by child marriage and their families
OP3.1: # girls, by age category and marital status, who participated in activities organized by the project to help prepare them for income generating opportunities
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OP3.2: # girls, by age category and marital status, who were linked up with income generating opportunities through the project
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Output 2: Increased access to formal education
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OP2.1: # of Parent-Teachers Associations, School Management Committees and Child Parliaments engaged by the project
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OP2.3: # parents/caregivers who participated in awareness sessions, organized by project, on how to keep girls in school and/or readmission into school
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OP2.4: # adolescent girls linked by the project to existing social protection schemes or scholarships or bridge courses in order for them to remain or re-enter school
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Outcome 3: Increased access to economic opportunities for girls at risk and affected by child marriage and their families
Baseline values, Midline values and endline values are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 (baseline) & July-Sept, 2018 (Midline) and sept-dec (2020) in intervention areas where Simvai and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project. Calculations are based on intervention areas only
OC3.1: % girls currently involved in income generating activities
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
Output 1: Young people are better informed about SRHR including adverse effects of CM and empowered to voice needs and rights
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OP1.1: # of youth groups formed/revitalised/strengthened
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016 - 2020
OP1.2: # of boys and girls trained by the project on SRHR, CM, communication skills
There was not baseline taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach from 2016-2020
Output 4: Increased access to child protection systems
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OP4.3: # CP committees engaged in the programme
No baseline was taken
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Outcome 4: Increased access to child protection systems
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OC4.1: # documented cases of mediation for girls at risk of and affected by child marriage by Child Protection Committees, facilitated by the project
No baseline was taken
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OC4.2: # of these cases which resulted in a satisfying response for the girls concerned, in the reporting period
No baseline was taken
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Output 5: Increased utilization of SRHR services that are responsive to the needs of young people
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OP5.1: # health care providers who were trained by the project on how to deliver youth friendly services successfully
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach from 2016-2020
OP5.2: # social accountability systems (village SRHR report card, community score card to girls groups and frontline workers) used by the project to monitor health facilities
Baseline was not taken for this indicator
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach from 2016-2020
Output 6: Increased engagement and collective action against CM and in support of ASRHR
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OP6.1: # of community conversations organized by the project on risks of child marriage and early childbearing
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OP6.2: #(social) media activities to raise awareness
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OP6.3: # of influential stakeholders/role models/frontrunners expressing views on SRHR and CM during events/ on platforms organized by the project
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
Target entire project 2016-2020
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Outcome 7 : Supportive rights-based legal and policy environment against CM
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
OC7.1: # laws, guidelines and policies changed leading to a decrease of barriers to SRH, including CM
No baseline was taken
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OC7.2: # cases of influentials / duty bearers endorsing alternative policy approaches presented by MTBA partners towards ensuring SRHR of women and girls, including CM
No baseline was taken
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
Young people are able to decide if and when to marry and pursue their SRHR in a supportive environment
Baseline values, Midline values and Endline values are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 (Baseline) & July-Sept, 2018 (Midline) and September-December 2020 (Endline) in intervention areas where Simvai and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project. Calculations are based on intervention areas only.
% girls that were married before 15
girls currently married, living with partner, separated, divorced or widowed who declare they were under 15 when married the first time
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
% girls that were married before 18
girls currently married, living with partner, separated, divorced or widowed who declare they were under 18 when married the first time
Data collected in November-December, 2016 by Population Council
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
Outcome 2: Increased access to formal education
Baseline, Midline and endline values are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 (baseline) & July-Sept, 2018 (Midline) and sept-Dec 2020(endline) in intervention areas where Simvai and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project. Calculations are based on intervention areas only
OC2.1: % of girls who ever attended education
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
OC2.2: Mean number of years of completed schooling, among those ever attended
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
OC2.3: % adolescent girls benefitting from social schemas or scholarships
This is the midline value
OC2.4: % of girls in school
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
Outcome 5: Increased utilization of SRHR services that are responsive to the needs of young people
OC5.1: # health facilities with improved Youth Friendly SRH services as a result of project activities
Bi-Annual Monitoring evaluation
Baseline was not taken
No target set for outcome level variables
Cumulative reach 2016-2020
OC5.2: % girls who are aware of youth friendly health services and who have accessed them when needed
Baseline values, Midline values and endline are based on data collected by Population Council in July - August, 2016 (baseline) & July-Sept, 2018 (Midline) and Sept-Dec 2020 (endline) in intervention areas where Simvai and Save the Children implement the Marriage: No Child's Play project. Calculations are based on intervention areas only
This is the midline value
This is the endline value
NL-KVK-41201463-PGLNS001
Save the Children Netherlands
Samen in actie tegen corona
Intervention strategy 1: Increase Covid-19 vaccine coverage
Even though vaccination has proven to be effective, it needs to overcome a number of challenges, including financial, low uptake, social stigma, and lack of accurate information, in order to work. Save the Children will address the barriers from supply and demand side, ensuring that more people have opportunities to get vaccines. Under this project, Save the Children India will drive the five key elements of COVID-19 vaccination communication strategy – strengthening vaccination facilities, social mobilization, capacity building, advocacy and media engagement in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Odisha.
Intervention Strategy 2: Enhance the COVID-19 Treatment in public health sector in partnership with Health Department, Medical Colleges, Allied Institutions, Alliances and Partners
Subsequent oxygen shortage and other essential supplies has overwhelmed India’s system. There is a shortage in supply of oxygen, lack of ICU beds, and brittle supply chains that have wreaked chaos in the cities of India. Additionally, the highly infectious virus is now spreading rapidly deep inside the villages in rural India. The rural health infrastructure is highly inadequate and underprepared to respond to the current COVID-19 surge. Experts are also predicting that India may witness a third wave of COVID and country should further strengthen the health facilities including pediatric inpatient care. Save the Children will equip public health facilities for improved oxygen delivery and other essential supplies at primary, secondary and tertiary care facilities.
Intervention Strategy 3 – Provide care and support for the home isolation cases
The number of home isolation cases are increasing day by day and it is known that the patients from marginalized communities, daily wagers and those belonging to low or middle-income group, are not able to buy essential items like oximeters, medicines, masks and sanitizers due to lack of resources. To correctly monitor the progress in terms of oxygen level, temperature and take appropriate preventive measures in home isolation, resources like finger-tip oximeter, thermometer, steamer, face masks, a hand sanitizer, Vitamin C tablets and Vitamin D3 sachets, paracetamol and cough syrup and treatment drugs as per government guidelines are needed. In consultation with district health department and their approval, Save the Children will customize COVID-19 Home Care Kit for home isolation patients and will hand over to the health facilities for supporting the needy patients. Through these kits, COVID patients in isolation can track their health status including oxygen level, temperature, update health officials on their health status, and seek any emergency medical support at the time of need from health facilities.
Intervention strategy 4: Understand the demand side barriers to the uptake of COVID-19 vaccination through a research focused on behavioral insights
Although the provision of the vaccination is important, the journey to vaccination begins long before that, when individuals and communities start learning about a vaccine and think about getting it. It is vital to understand how people make decisions related to vaccination in order to create vaccination programs and roll-outs that encourage more people to get vaccinated. Save the Children will conduct a research in order to understand the root causes of the fear against the update of the vaccination which will help inform further programming on changing communities’ behavior.
Giro555 (Stichting Samenwerkende Hulporganisaties)
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
Save the Children International
Save the Children Nederland
0703384448
info@savethechildren.nl
https://www.savethechildren.nl
481818
98645
Giro 555 (Stichting Samenwerkende Hulporganisaties)
Save the Children Netherlands
348091
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
180000
First disbursement
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
150686
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
383173
Giro 555 (Stichting Samenwerkende Hulporganisaties)
Save the Children Netherlands
100000
Save the Children Nederland
Save the Children International
94863
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children International
481818
Total committed amount
Save the Children Netherlands
NL-KVK-41201463-PINSO004
Save the Children Netherlands
Work: No Child's Business - India
Work: No Child’s Business’ is a programme of an alliance consisting of the Stop Child Labour Coalition, UNICEF Netherlands and Save the Children that aims to make a strong and lasting contribution to the elimination of child labour in India.
The country programme will contribute to the overall TOC of the Alliance programme with a specific focus on achieving structural reduction, rehabilitation and prevention of child labour in India by fostering multistakeholder partnerships to improve access to quality education, skills training, and protection and support for girls and boys impacted by economic/internal migration (SDG’s 8.7, 16.2, 5.2). The focus will be on the natural stone and garment and textile sector (NCR), and family agriculture and domestic work.
The programme will focus on children and young people subject to or at risk of child labour and their families in rural and urban areas. This mainly includes children involved in unorganised work and home-based work in garment, mining, family agriculture and domestic work - often hidden, migrants both with family and unaccompanied and potential migrants for economic purposes.
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children International
Save the Children Netherlands
International programme department
0031703384448
info@savethechildren.nl
https://www.savethechildren.nl
Child Labour
OECD DAC CRS Code 16070
0
357188
495735
496251
542484
206720
313947
Incoming funds for WNCB implementation in India
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
279626
Incoming funds for WNCB implementation in India
Save the Children Netherlands
190578
Incoming funds for WNCB implementation in India
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
410000
Disbursement to Save the Children India for WNCB implementation - Q3 2020
Save the Children Netherlands
SC India
535427
Disbursement for WNCB implementation in India
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
410000
Disbursement to Save the Children India for WNCB implementation in 2022
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
192837
Incoming funds for WNCB implementation in India (2022_02)
Save the Children Netherlands
575926
Incoming funds for WNCB India 2023
SCNL
SCNL WNCB India award
2098378
Total incoming amount for implementation in India (revised Aug. 2022 based on two Amendments, for additional funding for new activities as part of WNCB)
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children Netherlands
338745
Incoming funds for WNCB implementation in India
Save the Children Netherlands
410000
Disbursement for WNCB implementation in India - Q2 2021
Save the Children Netherlands
SC India
2098378
Total outgoing commitment for implementation in India (revised Aug. 2022, based on two amendments for additional funding for new activities part of WNCB)
Save the Children Netherlands
Save the Children India
71794
Disbursement to Save the Children India for WNCB implementation - Q1 2020
Save the Children Netherlands
SC India
198241
Disbursement to Save the Children India for WNCB implementation - Q1 2020
Save the Children Netherlands
SC India