2012 Photo Contest, Contemporary Issues, 1st prize

Child Brides

Photographer

Stephanie Sinclair

VII Photo Agency for <em>National Geographic</em> magazine

08 July, 2010

Sidaba (11), Qawla (12), and Galiay (13) are escorted to their future husbands’ home.

About the photographer

Stephanie Sinclair

After university, Sinclair worked for the Chicago Tribune, which sent her to cover the lead up to the war in Iraq. She later moved to the Middle East covering the region for six ...

Background story

Hajjah, Yemen

Sidaba (11), Qawla (12), and Galiay (13) are escorted to their future husbands’ home. The sisters married three brothers. Every year, all over the world, millions of girls below the age of 18 undergo marriages initiated by their families. The tradition of child marriage spans continents, religion, and class. Girls who marry early often abandon their education. The incidence of maternal and infant death is high for women who give birth under the age of 18. Child marriages often take place in defiance of national laws, and despite education programs about health issues. They are seen as an economic necessity in some regions, or are deeply ingrained in local culture.

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