Working paper
Sexual health and economic empowerment of young women and girls in Cuba: exploring the role of social norms
Publisher
Women's health
Sexual health
Women's rights
Women economic conditions
Cuba
Resources
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Sexual health and economic empowerment of young women and girls in Cuba | 898.81 KB |
Description
Key messages:
- Social norms intersect with SRH and WEE in multiple ways and can contribute to the success or failure of interventions targeted at each of those two areas. While some social norms are disabling or discriminatory, others are enabling or more positive.
- Social norms related to sexual behaviour can expose women, girls, men and boys to risks and vulnerabilities. Norms that emphasise women’s submissiveness can limit girls’ decision-making about sex, shape fertility choices and influence access to SRH services.
- Women tend to do paid work as long as it meets certain conditions – namely, that it: benefits the household; does not threaten the position of men; and does not interfere with the caring and household work that women are expected to provide.
- Policies and laws, facility-based interventions, skills training courses, empowerment initiatives and awareness-raising can improve SRH and WEE and could indirectly transform social norms related to SRH and WEE. A holistic approach including sex education at school, provision of childcare services, mass media campaigns and interventions targeting men and boys, is likely to be most effective in shifting social norms around SRH.
- The review also suggests a number of areas for further research, including a focus on adolescents and young women, vulnerable and under-researched groups, and gender-based violence.
Publication Details
Copyright:
Overseas Development Institute 2019
License type:
CC BY-NC-ND
Access Rights Type:
open
Series:
ODI Working paper 558
Post date:
11 Jul 2019
