Education: ProgramsGirls' Education and Community Participation Project (GECP): USAID partners with World Education on the GECP project to increase girls' enrollment and retention in primary school in nine northern districts of Benin, where the gender gap is most prominent, and the number of girls completing primary school is the lowest. GECP activities aim to :
The four-year project began February 2008 and will continue until January 2012. Ambassador's Girls Scholarship Program (AGSP): As part of the African Education Initiative, the Ambassador's Girls Scholarship Program started in Benin in 2004 to help the poorest children across the country go to primary school. To date, over 5,000 girls have received scholarships. In 2007, 1, 200 of the neediest boys also received scholarships. World Education Incorporated and two local Beninese partners, Groupe d'Action pour la Justice et l'Egalité Sociale and the Association pour la Protection de l'Enfance Malheureuse, utilize an extensive and transparent community participation process to identify and support the neediest girls including victims of child trafficking, the hearing impaired, and other special needs girls. The average value of the scholarships is $100 USD. Scholarships may include school uniforms, school bags, school supplies, and a lantern for night study, textbooks, and food. Teachers, professional women, and other community members mentor scholars, providing academic counseling, life skills and HIV/AIDS awareness.. The program is active in 40 schools in ten school districts throughout Benin. Integrated Approach to Combating Child Trafficking Project (IACCT): USAID partnered with UNICEF to combat child trafficking in Benin. The project began in October 2005 and is extended until December 2009. The overall objective of the IACCT is to support the Government of Benin in its efforts to combat child trafficking through an integrated approach. The project has three specific goals:
UNICEF has strengthened the local committees that monitor and prevent trafficking, and has created 200 new committees in the northern Atacora and Borgou departments. Campaigns to raise awareness against child trafficking have also reached over 35,000 people in the most endemic communities. To date, 380 victims of trafficking have been assisted and reintegrated into their families and school. IACT has developed a code of conduct for transporters based on the ant-trafficking law. The code of conduct has been translated into two local languages, and 1,000 copies have been distributed within ten districts of northern Benin. The majority of transporters in the project zones have signed the code, committing themselves to do their part in combating child trafficking in Benin. Women's Justice and Empowerment Initiative (WJEI)/EMPOWER The Women's Justice and Empowerment Initiative is a three-year, $55 million presidential initiative implemented in four African countries including Kenya, Zambia, South Africa and Benin. In Benin, the non-governmental organization Care International is mandated to carry out the first two components of awareness raising and victim support. With a total cost of $5,546,000, the "EMPOWER" project helps to reduce violence against women in the 77 communes of Benin. The project works closely with the third component of WJEI of "Strengthening the Legal Framework of Benin" component to be executed by the U.S. Department of Justice. . EMPOWER works in Benin to :
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