Publisher

UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO and Population Council, Kenya

Publication date

2021

Resources

Evidence Brief: Effectiveness of Interventions Designed to Prevent or Respond to Female Genital Mutilation

1
Effectiveness of Interventions Designed to Prevent or Respond to Female Genital Mutilation

Publisher

UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO and Population Council, Kenya

Publication date

2021

Number of pages

79

Publication

Effectiveness of Interventions Designed to Prevent or Respond to Female Genital Mutilation

Despite intensified efforts to build the evidence base globally to inform strategies to address female genital mutilation (FGM), there has been limited rigorous high-quality evidence on what set of interventions are effective in ending the harmful practice. This research report, accompanied with a brief, conveys key findings on the quality and strength of existing evidence on FGM interventions from 2008 to 2020.

alt=""

Publisher

UNFPA, UNICEF

Publication date

2021

Number of pages

82

Publication

Technical Guidance: A Comprehensive Approach to Accelerating the Elimination of Female Genital Mutilation

This technical guidance synthesizes findings from research and evidence-informed interventions, strategies, and lessons learned based on the experiences of the Joint Programme and other programmes supported by partners to inform the design and implementation of programmes aiming to end female genital mutilation. 

alt=""

Publication date

2022

Author

UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO and Population Council-Kenya

Publication

Research agenda and ethical guidance on FGM research

This ‘Global Research Agenda’, produced by UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO and Population Council-Kenya, outlines evidence gaps and research priorities that need to be addressed to eliminate FGM over the next five years and provides approaches to enable uptake and effective use of the evidence generated.

News story

Drought in Kenya proves a setback to eliminating female genital mutilation

calendar_today03 February 2022

Drought in Kenya has forced pastoralist communities to travel great distances in search of water. Girls pulled out of school to join their families are at particular risk of female genital mutilation. © UNFPA Kenya
1

Statement

A crisis within a crisis: Increased investment critical to end female genital mutilation as COVID-19 rages on

calendar_today01 February 2022

1

News story

In Somalia, 100 mothers pledge not to subject daughters to female genital mutilation

calendar_today31 January 2022

Girls listen to a youth educator network Y-PEER presentation on the harms of female genital mutilation at their school in Garowe, Puntland. © UNFPA Somalia/Tobin Jones
1
alt=””

Publisher

UNFPA

Publication date

Apr 2021

Author

UNFPA

Number of pages

7

Publication

Bodily autonomy: a cornerstone for achieving gender equality and universal access to sexual and reproductive health and rights

1

Joint evaluation of the UNFPA-UNICEF Joint Programme on the Elimination of Female Genital Mutilation: Accelerating Change Phase III (2018-2021)

A visual containing an illustration of a woman with the text ' of the UNFPA-UNICEF Joint Programme on the Elimination of Female Genital Mutilation: Accelerating Change Phase III (2018-2021)'

Document date: 2021

Evaluation type: Global

Region: n/a

Joint evaluation: Yes

System-wide evaluation: n/a

Download resources

The joint evaluation, conducted by the Evaluation Offices of UNFPA (lead agency) and UNICEF, assesses the programme contributions to outputs and outcomes during Phase III of the Joint Programme on the Elimination of Female Genital Mutilation (2018-2021). The evaluation provides evidence and lessons to inform the design of the Joint Programme post-Phase III to accelerate towards the Sustainable Development Goal target to end female genital mutilation (FGM) by 2030.

The evaluation finds that the Joint Programme continues to be a strategic and relevant response to the global issue of ending FGM. The Joint Programme has adapted effectively to COVID-19. The agility with which the programme has responded provides lessons for adapting to and understanding FGM within humanitarian settings. Yet, FGM receives insufficient consideration in humanitarian systems. The Joint Programme design is gender responsive, with a clear aspiration to move towards a gender-transformative approach, however, greater clarity is required to translate this approach to the country level.

Data collection methods

An infographic visual detailing data collection methods for the FGM evaluation

Among the several recommendations, the evaluation recommends the Joint Programme prioritize its global policy and advocacy work and should strategically strengthen the implementation of accountability systems. The Joint Programme should also advocate for fully funded national legal and policy frameworks, including addressing complex situations such as medicalization and cross-border FGM. A humanitarian approach should also be integrated within the post-Phase III Joint Programme design.

These lessons and evidence may also accelerate the implementation of the UNFPA strategic plan, 2022-2025, focused on ending gender-based violence and harmful practices against all women and girls, especially those that are furthest behind.

Further reads

Evaluation of Phase I and Phase II of the Joint Programme

Evaluation documents

Evaluation Report
Evaluation Brief
Evaluation Thematic Note: Gender
Evaluation Thematic Note: Complex Environments
Evaluation Thematic Note: Humanitarian
Evaluation Presentation
Management Response
alt=””

Publisher

UNFPA

Publication date

Dec 2020

Number of pages

35

Publication

Cost and Impact of Scaling Up: Female Genital Mutilation Prevention and Care Programmes

1