Abstract

Child marriage is associated with adverse health and social outcomes for women and girls. Among pastoralists in Kenya, child marriage is believed to be higher compared to the national average. This paper explores how social norms and contextual factors sustain child marriage in communities living in conflict-affected North Eastern Kenya. In-depth interviews were carried out with nomadic and semi-nomadic women and men of reproductive age in Wajir and Mandera counties. Participants were purposively sampled across a range of age groups and community types. Interviews were analysed thematically and guided by a social norms approach. We found changes in the way young couples meet and evidence for negative perceptions of child marriage due to its impact on the girls' reproductive health and gender inequality. Despite this, child marriage was common amongst nomadic and semi-nomadic women. Two overarching themes explained child marriage practices: 1) gender norms, and 2) desire for large family size. Our findings complement the global literature, while contributing perspectives of pastoralist groups. Contextual factors of poverty, traditional pastoral lifestyles and limited formal education opportunities for girls, supported large family norms and gender norms that encouraged and sustained child marriage.

Highlights

  • Child marriage, defined as the marriage of a girl or boy before the age of 18 years, disproportionately affects girls (UNICEF 2019)

  • This paper explores how social norms and contextual factors sustain child marriage in communities living in conflict-affected North Eastern Kenya

  • The risk factors, including rural residence, low levels of education, low socioeconomic status and high prevalence of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), are all characteristics of pastoralist communities living in North Eastern Kenya (Nyamongo 2000; Kipuri and Ridgewell 2008; Zakaria Maro et al 2012; Rumble et al 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Child marriage, defined as the marriage of a girl or boy before the age of 18 years, disproportionately affects girls (UNICEF 2019). The counties of Mandera and Wajir represent some of the most resource-deprived counties in Kenya, with high levels of child marriage and its associated negative reproductive health outcomes (IRIS 2015; MoALF 2018, 2017; African Institute for Development Policy 2017b, 2017a). These counties have an ethnically Somali and religiously Muslim population, where the majority are nomadic (and semi-nomadic) pastoralists. These populations live in rural areas with varying degrees of sedentarism, with little access to health services and formal education (Zakaria Maro et al 2012)

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