COVID-19 and Gender-based Violence (GBV): Hard-to-reach Women and Girls, Services, and Programmes in Kenya

Back to results
Author(s)
John, N. , McGovern, T. , Mwangi, M. , Raval, N. & Roy, C.
Publication language
English
Pages
18pp
Date published
23 Mar 2021
Publisher
Routledge: Gender & Development
Type
Articles
Keywords
Children & youth, Conflict, violence & peace, COVID-19, Epidemics & pandemics, Gender, Protection, human rights & security, Protection
Countries
Kenya
Organisations
Oxfam

Pandemics and government-imposed restrictions to control them, such as quarantines and school closures, exacerbate gender-based inequalities and increases exposure of women and girls to genderbased violence (GBV). The impacts of these adverse outcomes are further heightened due to diminished access to comprehensive GBV services, as governments redirect resources towards the emergency and deprioritise services such as GBV. Early reports suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic is no different, with GBV surging as governments imposed restrictive policies. In response, we conducted a rapid study in Kenya and interviewed 37 GBV and sexual and reproductive health (SRH) stakeholders from different sectors and types of organisations to understand how COVID-19 containment polices were impacting harderto-reach women and girls, as well as availability and access to services and programmes.

As the Government of Kenya imposed restrictive policies to contain the spread of COVID-19, comprehensive GBV services were not deemed essential in the beginning. The government turned its attention to GBV only after reports of rising GBV in the early months of the pandemic led to advocacy by GBV stakeholders. Even then, the government’s response was ad hoc, and lacking sectorspecific guidelines to ensure availability of comprehensive GBV services and programmes. Ultimately, this led to confusion and large-scale disruption in the availability of GBV services and programmes on the ground. Kenyan women and girls will pay the price of this negligence, and some may never fully recover from experienced adverse outcomes.

Authors: 
Oxfam UK