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

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

Abstract

Jordan is a small, highly resource-constrained country situated in the heart of the Middle East. Long a haven for refugees fleeing regional conflict, over one-third of Jordan’s 10 million residents are not Jordanian. Jordan is home to approximately 1.5 million Syrians, half of whom are registered as refugees with UNHCR. Jordan is also hosting 2.5 million registered Palestine refugees.

In Jordan, GAGE has collected mixed-methods baseline data (between mid-2018 and early 2019) with approximately 4,000 Syrian, Palestinian, Jordanian and Dom adolescents living in host communities, formal refugee camps and informal tented settlements; fielded three rounds of covid-19 phone surveys; and is running ongoing participatory research groups with older married girls, out-of-school boys and adolescent girls and boys with disabilities (15–19 years). GAGE is also evaluating a variety of UNICEF Jordan’s programming. This brief highlights headline emerging findings and provides links to fuller publications.

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

Citation

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

Adolescent lives in Jordan: what are we learning from longitudinal evidence? Lessons from longitudinal research with adolescents

Updates to this page

Published 31 March 2022