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Prevention pays: the economic benefits of ending violence in schools

PreventionpaysThe report Prevention pays reveals the enormous economic and social cost of violence in schools across the world at community, national and global level.

The key findings of the research include:

  • Total cost of school violence in social benefits lost (in just 13 countries for which information is available) equates to almost $60 billion
  • Violence leads to truancy, lower educational attainment and thus lower level jobs
  • No country is immune to violence in schools but the cost to poorer families is disproportionately high, affecting their ability to escape the poverty trap.

This report is a summary of the research carried out by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and links to Learn Without Fear programme work. Read the full ODI report

Plan argues that governments will save money in the long run if they invest now in preventing violence in schools. Therefore, we call on governments to:

  • Introduce or enforce legislation banning all forms of violence
  • Invest funds in proven interventions to prevent school violence
  • Invest in teacher training and promote positive discipline methods
  • Establish school and teacher codes of conduct and reporting mechanisms

 

Full report

Help end violence in schools

Everyone benefits from reducing violence in schools

Everyone can play their part in reducing school violence

Research shows corporal punishment can cause children to feel suicidal

Children have the right to be safe at school

90 countries legally permit corporal punishment in schools

No country is immune from violence in schools

Violence in schools happens everywhere, every day

Violence in schools has devastating long-term consequences

All violence in schools is preventable

In Zambia one-third of 13-15 year-olds have been raped

Children who suffer family violence are more likely to be bullies

Our teachers should be there to teach us and not to touch us where we don't want or to solicit love favours from us girls. We are irritated by love advances from teachers. I feel like disappearing from the world if a person who is supposed to protect me instead destroys me.

Girl, 15 years old, Uganda