
Early pregnancy presents multifaceted challenges for girls: their childhood experience is suddenly over, but they are still not afforded the respect and authority given to adults. They often find themselves solely responsible for the health and wellbeing of a new baby while navigating unaddressed trauma and stigma.
“Economic independence increases a person’s choices. It increases confidence in yourself and your ability, and it makes you responsible.”
Young mother, Tanzania
Across East and Southern Africa, adolescent girls face extreme inequality, structural violence and poverty, as well as unique challenges stemming from young pregnancy:
Supported by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, the Young Mothers Consortium is a multi-country initiative in Kenya, Mozambique and Tanzania that provides direct resources and psychosocial support for young mothers ages 10 to 24. The convenings, education and storytelling experiences facilitated by the Consortium provide young mothers with connection, agency and opportunities for collective action. To date, the four-partner consortium has reached more than 1,200 young mothers and an equivalent number of children, supported 12 early childhood or daycare centers and enabled more than 230 businesses led by young mothers to start or grow.
“Trust us with money. When we have money, we have choice: we resist violence, we start businesses, we go back to school, we invest in our children, and we plan for our futures.”
Young mothers’ manifesto
Read the full Young Mothers’ Manifesto here.
Key Lessons Learned
Over the past two years of dedicated effort on behalf of young mothers and their children, the Consortium has reflected on and assessed its grassroots efforts to develop key takeaways that will inform the next phase of its work:
“I have learned to value myself. Even if I gave birth while I was young, I learned not to lose hope.”
Young mother