dc.description.abstract |
Gender-Based Violence (GBV) is part of the hard realities of living in an informal
settlement. The United Nations reports it as one of the serious human rights
violations, with more than 30% of the females experiencing it. Vulnerability to GBV
in these locales is even increased when one is younger, as is the case with secondary
school girls, with statistics indicating that they have the highest recorded number of
cases of GBV. Numerous policies to mitigate this are in place, yet the vice is on the
increase. Most data on GBV that exist focus on adult females, yet the vice can be
traced in the early years of the females’ lives, and later ignored and thus normalizing
the malpractice. Besides, this vice could be propagated by congested housing in
informal settlements in urban areas, coupled with broken moral fabric in traditional
families. The study, therefore, set out to explore secondary school girls' experiences
of gender-based violence in Mathare informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya. The
objectives of the study were: to explore the forms of gender-based violence
experienced by the girls; to establish the girls' responses to these acts; to explore
schools’ responses to gender-based violence cases, and to find out from the girls how
secondary schools can improve their support systems. The social feminist theory by
Crenshaw and Janes, and the social support theory by Drennon-Gala and Cullen
guided the qualitative study, which employed phenomenological research design
within the interpretivist paradigm. The study involved 28 participants (girls), who
were selected through snowball sampling, from two public secondary schools in
Mathare informal settlements selected purposively. Data were generated through
participatory visual methods (drawings), which were used to explore girls’
experiences of GBV. Data emanating from discussions of the drawing were
thematically analyzed. The findings revealed that the girls experienced physical,
sexual, psychological, and verbal abuse. The girls’ responses to the violence included
resisting, reporting, seeking help, and internalizing feelings. On the other hand, some
girls did not report, but rather remained silent. Further, the girls revealed that their
responses to school depended on their knowledge of response strategies, whether
teachers kept the matter in confidence or not, and the fears that the response was
perceived to bring along. Some girls reported that the key school response was often
guidance and counseling while others reported that the school was unable to help
them. Several participants reported a lack of belief by the teachers upon reporting
their experiences, perceiving the experiences as normal occurrences. To improve
school support for them the girls shared that schools should formulate clear reporting
strategies and introduce whole-school awareness training. Thus, the study concluded
that girls in informal settlements experienced GBV in varied forms and that sexual
abuse was experienced the most; that teachers reacted “retrogressively” to abused
girls’ cases; that those who reported their experiences were casually treated to a
counseling session by the school; thus, that schools should strive to offer adequate
support to girls who experience it. The study therefore, recommended that schools
should have a mechanism to identify girls experiencing GBV, understand their plight,
and offer specialized trauma counseling services. Furthermore, that schools should
organise whole school development sessions where teachers, boys and girls are
trained on general sexuality, as well as GBV awareness and possible intervention
strategies. The study findings could be significant to secondary school girls, teachers,
the Ministry of Education and other researchers. |
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