It hopes to tackle two of the district's largest problems - gender gap in youth literacy rates and high numbers of domestic and sexual abuse cases.
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The Problem Bundi has been identified as having distinct socio-cultural issues, especially amongst its adolescent boys and young men, including lower literacy rates in comparison to adolescent girls and high numbers of domestic and sexual abuse cases. Child marriages have also been cited as a community problem in the area and across the state, with the median age for girls at 15, and boys at 19; lower than the country’s legal age for marriage. The Initiative Using Kishor Varta, Hindi for ‘Discussions for Adolescents’, users can call a toll-free number that allows them to listen to a recording of information on issues affecting adolescents, including gender equality, body literacy, health, delaying marriage age, etc, in the form of audio stories. Volunteers are on hand to support the adolescents in using the service. The stories, available in both Hindi and Marathi, follow the lives of four main characters, allowing the users to connect with the key issues being discussed through their experiences. After listening to each character's life story, users are prompted to solve the character’s problems and choose their future course of action. Users can also give feedback and ask questions, which are answered via SMS to the users’ phone. The initiative has been developed with the intention that adolescents, who may be too embarrassed to ask questions otherwise, will not only receive answers themselves but will go on to share this information with their peers, thus widening the scope of information disseminated. This hopes to promote a new set of values amongst adolescent boys, leading to a different, more positive course of action, resulting in the adoption of an improved ‘norm’ over time. The Impact After it’s initial pilot run in 2015, the toll-free number received around 50,000 calls within 5 months, including 16,000 in a single month. Of these calls 6,000 are said to have led to “deeper engagement through responses, feedbacks and audio messages.” Teachers of the schools reported back to the charity that the stories were a very popular means of providing information and that their students were regularly demanding more information, in particular body literacy, health, reproductive and sexual health. The programme is now part of the standard school curriculum, having been integrated as a monthly class. Due to the positive response of the pilot runs, the charity hopes to implement the initiative again soon, this time reaching out to even more schools and young-people centred institutions. To know more about this initiative by the Centre for Health and Social Justice, click here.