Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is a global epidemic. Worldwide, 1 in 5 girls are married before turning 18, and 1 in 3 women have experienced physical or sexual violence in their lives. COVID-19 lockdowns have worsened this global crisis. Most VAWG prevention programs are delivered through resource-intensive grassroots mobilization campaigns. Those campaigns produce mixed results at best, and scaling up their implementation is often prohibitively expensive in low-resource settings.
Following a first forum in July 2022 on Innovative Partnerships between the Entertainment and Development Sectors, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) and the World Bank DIME Narrating Behavior Change program held a second forum to increase awareness on the effectiveness of edutainment when it comes to fighting VAWG. This forum discussed five randomized control trials in , , , and Nigeria ( and ), that demonstrate that edutainment delivered through TV, movies, radio or social media can be a cost-effective tool to reshape gender norms and prevent VAWG in developing countries.
Research alone will not change the world. The research presentations were followed by a panel of edutainment partners that are shaping the entertainment and development industries in the world¡¯s entertainment capitals. These edutainment partners discussed their innovative public-private initiatives that are helping combat gender stereotypes and prevent VAWG in developing countries.
Speakers
Axel van TrotsenburgManaging Director of Operations, World Bank | |
Arianna LegoviniDirector, Development Impact Evaluation, World Bank | |
Chief Diversity Officer, HFPA | |
Wilmah MunemeraActor and Activist | |
Victor OrozcoSenior Economist and Edutainment Lead, World Bank | |
Professor, Harvard University | |
Executive Director, Population Foundation of India | |
Eric AriasEconomist, World Bank | |
Salome AlooKenya Country Director, Impact(Ed) International | |
Assistant Professor, Washington University in St. Louis |