[ Causes et conséquences du phénomène filles-mères dans des écoles secondaires non conventionnées de la sous-division urbaine de Gbadolite en 2020 ]
Volume 37, Issue 4, October 2022, Pages 793–801
Bertin Bembi Bosso1, Aimé Yongo2, and CT Robert Kpado3
1 Assistant deuxième mandat, ISTM GEMENA, RD Congo
2 Assistant deuxième mandat, ISTM GEMENA, RD Congo
3 Assistant, ISTM GEMENA, RD Congo
Original language: French
Copyright © 2022 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Among the problems that affect families in several developing countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) there is poverty due to the drop in income and the difficult general economic situation hampered by the Corona virus pandemic which constrains the inhabitants of this country, especially the city dwellers, to resort to multiple survival strategies. This situation weakens most families to exercise their functions, in particular that of a body for the socialization and protection of its members. According to the Ministry of Health, among adolescent girls aged 16 to 21, who represent 41% of the female population of the survey. Getting pregnant comes from the fact that adolescent girls are not informed about how their bodies work, they often do not know the fertile periods, they also ignore the use of condoms as a contraceptive method, as well as the false information that adolescents exchange about sexuality to convince their female partners. (DHS 2014). Indeed, in the city of Gbadolite and, most families with single mothers are prey to conflicts often find their outcome in violence, hatred, defamation or even divorce of the parents, the extent of which cannot be allow different social analysis that is the demographer hence the interest in circumscribing the motivations that contribute to their occurrence and in suggesting possible solutions so that works of youth prepared for their family responsibilities and social.
Author Keywords: Causes, Consequences, Phenomenon, Girl-Mothers.
Volume 37, Issue 4, October 2022, Pages 793–801
Bertin Bembi Bosso1, Aimé Yongo2, and CT Robert Kpado3
1 Assistant deuxième mandat, ISTM GEMENA, RD Congo
2 Assistant deuxième mandat, ISTM GEMENA, RD Congo
3 Assistant, ISTM GEMENA, RD Congo
Original language: French
Copyright © 2022 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Among the problems that affect families in several developing countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) there is poverty due to the drop in income and the difficult general economic situation hampered by the Corona virus pandemic which constrains the inhabitants of this country, especially the city dwellers, to resort to multiple survival strategies. This situation weakens most families to exercise their functions, in particular that of a body for the socialization and protection of its members. According to the Ministry of Health, among adolescent girls aged 16 to 21, who represent 41% of the female population of the survey. Getting pregnant comes from the fact that adolescent girls are not informed about how their bodies work, they often do not know the fertile periods, they also ignore the use of condoms as a contraceptive method, as well as the false information that adolescents exchange about sexuality to convince their female partners. (DHS 2014). Indeed, in the city of Gbadolite and, most families with single mothers are prey to conflicts often find their outcome in violence, hatred, defamation or even divorce of the parents, the extent of which cannot be allow different social analysis that is the demographer hence the interest in circumscribing the motivations that contribute to their occurrence and in suggesting possible solutions so that works of youth prepared for their family responsibilities and social.
Author Keywords: Causes, Consequences, Phenomenon, Girl-Mothers.
Abstract: (french)
Parmi les problèmes qui affectent les familles dans plusieurs pays en voie de développement comme la République Démocratique du Congo (RDC) y figure la pauvreté due à la baisse des revenus et la conjoncture économique générale difficile entravé par la pandémie à Corona virus qui contraignent les habitants de ce pays, surtout les citadins à recourir à des stratégies de survies multiples. Cette situation affaiblit la plupart des familles à exercer leurs fonctions, notamment celle d’instance de socialisation et de protection de ses membres. Selon le Ministère de santé, parmi les adolescentes âgées de 16 à 21 ans et qui représentent 41% de la population féminine de l’enquête. Tomber enceinte vient du fait que les adolescentes et ne sont pas informées sur le fonctionnement de leur corps, elles ne savent pas souvent les périodes fécondes, elles ignorent également l’utilisation des préservatifs comme moyen contraceptif, ainsi que des fausses informations que les adolescents échangent au sujet de la sexualité pour convaincre leurs partenaires féminins. (EDS 2014). En effet, dans la ville de Gbadolite et, la plupart des familles qui ont des filles-mères sont en proie à des conflits trouvent souvent leur dénouement dans la violence, la haine, la diffamation voire le divorce des parents dont l’ampleur ne peut laisser différente analyse sociale qu’est le démographe d’où l’intérêt à circonscrire les motivations qui concourent à leur survenance et à suggérer des pistes des solutions pour que s’édifient à Gbadolite des œuvres d’une jeunesse préparée à ses responsabilités familiales et sociales.
Author Keywords: Causes, Conséquences, Phénomène, Filles-Mères.
How to Cite this Article
Bertin Bembi Bosso, Aimé Yongo, and CT Robert Kpado, “Causes and consequences of the girl-mother phenomenon in non-agreement secondary schools in the urban sub-division of Gbadolite in 2020,” International Journal of Innovation and Applied Studies, vol. 37, no. 4, pp. 793–801, October 2022.