Abstract

Child marriage is a fundamental violation of human rights and a threat to access to education, sexual and reproductive health care, and employment. It also threatens freedom from violence, reproductive rights, movement, and the right to consensual marriage. In most countries in sub-Saharan Africa, the legal age of marriage is 18 years. Hence, girls who marry before 18 years are considered as victims of child marriage. Closely knitted to legal age for marriage is the issue of age for sexual consent, which refers to the minimum age at which a person is considered to have the legal capacity to consent to sexual intercourse. While there seem to be a standard legal age for marriage, the legal age for sexual consent varies in most countries in sub-Saharan Africa and is often lower than the legal age of marriage. In this commentary, we argue that the gap between the legal age of sexual consent and marriage partly accounts for some of the sexual and reproductive health challenges such as intimate partner violence, sexually transmitted infections, adolescent pregnancy, early childbirth, including unsafe abortions among adolescent girls in sub-Saharan Africa and infringements on their sexual and reproductive health rights. This commentary highlights strategic potential interventions that could help address the identified gaps. We argue that aligning the age for sexual consent and marriage is not the solution to the problem. However, what is critical is the education of young people about sexual and reproductive health issues and comprehensive sexuality education through advocacy networks at the national and local levels. Thus, the key is to provide accurate, timely, and non-judgmental sexual and reproductive health and rights information to young people irrespective of the prevailing age of consent. This provision will empower them to make informed decisions about their sexual and reproductive health.

Highlights

  • Ensuring sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) of adolescents are encapsulated in human rights instruments and policies that have been signed, ratified, and adopted by individual states and nations [1]

  • When adolescents are denied of SRHR, it predisposes them to a plethora of risky sexual behaviours, social delinquencies and adverse sexual and reproductive health (SRH) outcomes such as adolescent pregnancies, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), including Human Immunode‐ ficiency Virus (HIV) among others [1, 3]

  • When accurate information and comprehensive sexuality education [29] are made available to adolescents, they would appreciate that having age for sexual consent at 16 years does not imply that they can engage in risky sexual behaviour like multiple sexual partnership, sexual experimentation, and unsafe sex

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Summary

Introduction

Ensuring sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) of adolescents are encapsulated in human rights instruments and policies that have been signed, ratified, and adopted by individual states and nations [1]. Except for girls in Mali, Uganda, and Nigeria, the legal age of sexual consent is lower in the ten countries in sub-Saharan Africa with fertility rates above 5.0. This mismatch implies that, there is a two-year gap between the legal age for sexual consent and age for marriage in Ghana.

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