Strict parents and social stigma limit mobile use for girls in poor countries

Online safety and digital literacy compromised by challenges teenage girls face in accessing mobile technology, finds study

Strict parenting and social disapproval are among factors that make teenage girls in developing countries significantly less likely than boys to own a mobile phone, researchers have found.

Limited access to mobile technology also means girls are sharing phones in secret, leaving them more vulnerable to the harmful effects of social media because of their relative inexperience online, according to a survey by Girl Effect and the Vodafone Foundation.

More than half of the girls interviewed by Girl Effect, a non-profit aimed at empowering adolescent girls, said they had borrowed devices from friends, brothers or parents.

Kecia Bertermann, technology director at Girl Effect, said: “This study reveals the reality for girls and their position at the back of the queue when it comes to accessing mobile. We found that girls experience more of the risks but fewer, if any of the benefits; without the time or permission to develop the confidence to explore more sophisticated uses of mobile, girls’ tech literacy is hampered.”

The researchers trained teenage ambassadors to interview 1,400 15- to 19-year-olds in Nigeria, Tanzania, Malawi, Rwanda, India and Bangladesh. Though smartphones are commonplace across each of the six countries, it was found that girls face disproportionate barriers to accessing technology, diminishing their digital literacy.

Bertermann said that girls who resorted to secretive phone use felt unable to tell parents or friends about safety issues arising from their use of social media. The study identified male harassment as their foremost concern.

The researchers found marked differences in the way boys and girls used mobile technology. In Nigeria and Malawi, for instance, boys tended to use phones for a more sophisticated range of activities, from spending time on social media and searching the internet for news to finding jobs. Girls in these locations were more likely to be restricted to simple tasks like calling their parents or using the calculator.

In India and Bangladesh, girls with mobile phones face stigma within their communities. Those breaking rules imposed on their usage reported punishments including severe beatings, being kept out of school or even early marriage.

In Malawi and Rwanda, where access to mobile is restricted and tech literacy among girls is low, girls expressed fears that a phone might lead to unwanted pregnancy by making it easier to contact boys. However, an overwhelmingly majority also felt that a phone could help to keep them safe.

Girl Effect, which is aiming to improve digital literacy and online safety among girls, said the results would help them to provide targeted services to the estimated 7 million girls using borrowed phones.

Contributor

Karen McVeigh

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Women tap into new roles as mobile internet scheme targets rural India | Amrit Dhillon
A programme to improve digital literacy has provided 1.2 million women in rural India with access to technology hitherto denied them by a conservative culture

Amrit Dhillon in Rajasthan

05, Dec, 2016 @5:00 AM

Article image
Funding for women’s rights groups in poor countries falls by more than half
As the Association for Women’s Rights in Development forum convenes in Brazil, unpublished research shows declining support for women’s groups since 2011

Liz Ford in Costa do Sauípe

08, Sep, 2016 @10:00 AM

Article image
Femicide the rallying cry for families of girls killed in Guatemalan orphanage fire | Rossalyn Warren
Lawyers claim the disaster that killed 41 girls at the San José Pinula children’s shelter reflects wider state failings on the protection of women in Guatemala

Rossalyn Warren in Guatemala City

04, May, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
'I just got trapped': Nepal tries to expand girls' horizons beyond marriage
Child marriage in Nepal is denying girls education and the country a boost in GDP, but the government is slowly challenging the status quo

Liz Ford in Kathmandu

18, May, 2016 @4:00 AM

Article image
Banning alcohol to protect girls? India is missing the mark | Pauline Oosterhoff
By debating prohibition ahead of state elections, Tamil Nadu is concealing the real issue: that gender and caste discrimination are endemic in India

Pauline Oosterhoff

12, May, 2016 @6:00 AM

Article image
Cambodia's YouTube provocateur: 'Is a woman's value measured by virginity?'
From menstruation to masturbation, no topic is off limits for a candid online activist who has established a big following in culturally conservative Cambodia

Marta Kasztelan in Phnom Penh

09, Sep, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Women bear the brunt as finances and families are undone by India's cash crisis
Bank accounts are rare among Indian women, leaving them unable to deposit savings that many have preferred to keep secret from their spouses

Vidhi Doshi in Mumbai

22, Dec, 2016 @5:00 AM

Article image
How to end gender violence? Give money to visionary local groups | Jessica Neuwirth
The 16-day campaign against gender violence is a chance to review financial support for women’s rights groups and steer funds to those with direct impact

Jessica Neuwirth

06, Dec, 2016 @11:39 AM

Article image
Egypt court ruling upholds decision to freeze assets of women's rights activists
Clampdown on civil rights groups continues as government pursues case against campaigners accused of using overseas funds to destabilise Egypt

Liz Ford and Associated Press

12, Jan, 2017 @1:01 PM

Article image
In Syria and Bosnia, women are quietly changing the world
As the women’s rights in development (Awid) forum meets in Brazil, we celebrate those tackling the gender inequalities at the root of conflicts

Madeleine Rees

06, Sep, 2016 @9:15 AM