Fast Facts: 30 years of uneven progress for adolescent girls

UNICEF
Mar 07, 2025

Fast Facts: 30 years of uneven progress for adolescent girls


Despite significant achievements in areas such as education over the last three decades, millions of adolescent girls across the world today are still out of school, ill-equipped for the future, facing gaps in life-saving health services, and at risk of harmful practices such as child marriage, female genital mutilation, violence and abuse.

A new report Girl Goals: What has changed for girls? Adolescent girls’ rights over 30 years – launched by UNICEF, Plan International and UN Women ahead of International Women’s Day – reviews how adolescent girls’ lives have changed in the last 30 years since the Beijing Platform for Action was endorsed by 189 governments in 1995.

Key facts from the report include:

Health and wellbeing:

  • Globally, the number of adolescent girls giving birth has nearly halved over the past 30 years. Still, nearly 12 million adolescent girls aged 15-19 are expected to give birth in 2025. Among younger adolescent girls (aged 10-14), for whom the risk of pregnancy is even more grave, this number is estimated to be more than 325,000.
  • Complications from pregnancy and childbirth account for roughly 1 in every 23 deaths among adolescent girls aged 15-19, worldwide.
  • Globally, the proportion of underweight adolescent girls aged 10-19 has declined slightly in the last three decades, from 10 per cent to 8 per cent.

The report lays bare the urgent need for global action to unlock the enormous potential of adolescent girls and puts forward the following recommendations: 

  • Elevating adolescent girls’ voices and supporting their advocacy to shape policymaking on the issues that affect their lives. 
  • Focusing on areas where progress has stalled and is a top priority for adolescent girls themselves – for example on closing the education, skills and training gap for girls – while considering new global trends and attitudes.
  • Using data-driven evidence to invest where gaps are largest and most pressing for adolescent girls, focusing on changes at scale and joint targeted action – with a greater focus on economic empowerment and ensuring girls have the skills, assets and resources they need to thrive.

Quote sheet:

“Adolescent girls are a powerful force for global change. With the right support at the right time, they can help deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals and reshape our world,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “Investments in critical areas such as education, skills, protection and essential health and nutrition services can unlock the potential of adolescent girls across the world and lift-up communities and countries."

Kathleen Sherwin, Chief Strategy and Engagement Officer for Plan International, added: “Tireless efforts to combat gender inequality mean that a girl’s chances of going to school are significantly higher than three decades ago, and her chances of marrying or becoming pregnant as a child much lower. There is much to celebrate – but at the same time, this progress is fragile, uneven, and constantly under threat. Too many girls continue to face discrimination and abuse every day, simply for being young and female. Our work to achieve equality for girls must continue, working with girls, women and their allies around the world.”

“Too many adolescent girls still face violence, limited education, and lack of health services. Our promise of leaving no one behind demands urgent action,” said UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous. “We have come a long way, but we have miles to go before every girl’s potential is recognized and protected. Empowering all adolescent girls is the surest investment in a more sustainable, equitable, and peaceful world.”