As the autumn term begins, going back to school looks very different for children in the UK and around the world this year.
The temporary closure of schools because of coronavirus has forced over 743 million girls out of school globally.
And while many children will be eagerly returning to class over the coming months, our experience of working in health crises tells us that devastatingly, many girls may never make it back to education.
A safe space and a decent meal
For many girls around the world, school is the only safe space they know and their only source of a decent meal.
We know that closing schools and interrupting education dramatically affects girls’ lives. For those who can’t go back to school, their futures are more likely to include early or forced marriage, pregnancy, exploitation and abuse.
It’s feared that the pandemic will disrupt efforts to end child marriage globally, resulting in an additional 13 million child marriages over the next ten years.
"My fear is that women will really suffer. Men will abuse us. Because if I don’t have food and a boy has food, if I ask him for help, he will ask me for sex before he gives me some. This is the suffering I am talking about."
- Janet, 14, Liberia
Even when home schooling is in place, girls are less likely than boys to continue getting some kind of education. Outbreaks of disease increase the existing burdens of unpaid care and domestic work that already fall disproportionately to girls and young women.
Girls may be expected to do more chores at home or to care for a sick relative, making them much less likely to home study than boys.
Securing a safe future
Now more than ever, we must stand with girls everywhere and protect their right to a safe future free from discrimination, inequality and abuse – here in the UK and all over the world.
That’s why we’re partnering with girls and listening to their experiences, to make sure their voices aren’t forgotten. We’re also working to meet girls’ immediate needs as well as supporting the long-term recovery of their communities.