Adolescent lives in Ethiopia: what are we learning from longitudinal evidence?

This brief highlights headline emerging findings from the Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence (GAGE) programme

Abstract

Ethiopia has made remarkable progress over the last two decades. The poverty rate has halved (from 46% to 24%), the primary completion rate has more than doubled (from 18% to 50%) and the odds of marriage for girls under the age of 15 have fallen to less than 1 in 10. However, alongside the covid-19 pandemic, the last two years have seen increasing ethnic and religious tension and violence, as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has struggled to deliver on promised political transformations.

In Ethiopia GAGE has collected baseline and midline data with approximately 8,000 rural and urban adolescents in Afar, Amhara and Oromia regions as well as Dire Dawa City Administration; fielded two rounds of covid-19 phone surveys; and is running ongoing participatory research groups with older girls and boys (15–19 years). Nested within the Ethiopian study, GAGE is also carrying out an impact evaluation of the adolescent empowerment programme ‘Act With Her’ (AWH). This brief highlights headline emerging findings from this unique dataset, as well as providing links to more comprehensive publications and an annex with key quantitative indicators.

This is an output of the Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence (GAGE) programme

Citation

GAGE consortium (2021) ‘Adolescent lives in Ethiopia: what are we learning from longitudinal evidence? Lessons from longitudinal research with adolescents.’ Policy brief. London: Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence.

Adolescent lives in Ethiopia: what are we learning from longitudinal evidence?

Updates to this page

Published 1 March 2022