This brief, synthesizing research findings, analysis, and policy recommendations, was produced for the UN Women policy brief series.
Adolescence is recognized as a window of opportunity for offsetting childhood disadvantage and altering life trajectories. With more than one billion adolescents in the world, and many countries in the Global South experiencing a youth bulge, there is increasing urgency for national governments and donors to provide greater support, services and programming to this age group.
Evidence on the economic and social impacts of cash transfers (CTs) highlights that such programmes can reap multiple dividends across the life cycle—including in terms of school and health service uptake, intrahousehold decision-making, and intimate partner violence. There is growing interest in how to leverage these programmes to improve adolescent well-being across the second decade of life and beyond.
This policy brief reviews the effects of CTs on the rights and capabilities of adolescent girls and boys (10–19 years), using a gender and capability lens and focusing on three key capability domains: education, sexual and reproductive health, and freedom from violence. Based on this evidence, the brief highlights the importance of a “cash plus” approach to enhancing adolescents’ multidimensional well-being and achieving the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Suggested citation
Jones, N., Presler-Marshall and Kahane, M. (2019) ‘Gender and age-responsive social protection: the potential of cash transfers to advance adolescent rights and capabilities.’ Policy Brief. New York: UN Women; London: Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence. (https://www.gage.odi.org/publication/gender-and-age-responsive-social-protection-the-potential-of-cash-transfers-to-advance-adolescent-rights-and-capabilities/)