“I married because …”: Motivations to marry early among female spouses in child marriages in northern Ghana
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Children and Youth Services Review
Abstract
Child marriage is practiced in Ghana with a prevalence rate of 27.2 %. This high prevalence is due to how
marriage is conceptualized and constructed in communities that practice child marriage. Though reasons for the
practice of child marriage are well documented, empirical studies of the married adolescent girls’ reasons for
marrying early in the Ghanaian context are scant. This study, therefore, sought to present experiential factors
that influenced the early marriage of adolescent girls. Twenty-one married girls aged between 13 and 17 years
were recruited from selected communities in the Northern region of Ghana using purposeful, convenient and
snowball sampling techniques. Individual face-to-face in-depth interviews with a semi-structured interview guide
were adopted for the collection of data. A generic inductive qualitative analysis method was used to analyze the
accounts of their experiences. Three core themes emerged as reasons influencing participants’ decision to marry.
Personal motivating factors focused on adolescent girls’ personal need for children, idleness, peer group comparison
and love. Economically motivated reasons include poverty, the quest for a better life and enticement by
men. Sociocultural reasons include teenage pregnancy, family pressure and societal views on marriage among
others. Information on the motivations for marriage among adolescent girls may be relevant to policymakers and
interventionists in developing measures and interventions that are tailored to the needs of individuals affected by
the practice of child marriage.
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Research Article