In overseas development work, girl power is alive and well.
It's not a throwback to the 1990s pop scene; rather it's a pragmatic concept that can inspire long term change in families, communities and nations. Over the last 30 years, I've sponsored 21 girls through the international children's charity Plan UK, because the organisation concentrates on the Because I am a Girl campaign, and puts young girls at the heart of its work.
So why girls? Firstly, they are the worst affected by poverty. They are more likely than boys to suffer from malnutrition, die before the age of five and be trafficked.
In a poor family in a developing country, parents are more likely to pay for their boys, rather than their girls, to go to school. Often females are viewed as financial assets - to be sent to work to earn money or to be married off for dowries.
Boys receive more investment as they're considered as future breadwinners. Meanwhile girls who aren't yet teenagers can end up wives and mothers, facing hugely increased risks of dying in pregnancy and childbirth. Too often, they face violence, hunger and are simply not given the right to decide their own future.
If we disrupt this pattern, we can unlock amazing potential and upset the cycle of poverty. The saying goes that if you educate a girl, you educate a nation. If girls are supported to gain skills and stay in education, and if they receive support from government and their communities, they are much more likely to realise their rights and to help reduce poverty in the long term.
An educated girl is more likely to be healthy and literate and to be generous about passing on the skills and advantages she's gained to her extended family. An educated girl is also more likely to invest her income back into her family, her community and her country. Even from a strictly economic angle, concentrating on girls makes sense.
Besides continuing development work, we also need to pay special attention to girls in disaster situations - such as the current food crisis in Kenya and across East Africa. Plan UK's research shows that girls are some of the hardest hit - they may never have been taught the skills to deal with an emergency and they're often the last to eat what little food exists.
Furthermore, they are particularly at risk of sexual abuse during such times of upheaval. I've heard tales of girls attacked on their way to refugee camps and tackling the dangers of sharing sleeping, bathing and toilet facilities with men in the tumult of emergency shelters.
Plan works to equip girls around the world with the skills they need to best survive in these kinds of situations. Plan staff members teach girls first aid, how to swim and climb, and how to develop early warning systems for disasters like floods, food crises and earthquakes.
Girl power is thriving and can have a transformational effect on communities by reducing poverty and championing human rights. But we need men and boys on board, as well as women, to help shift the barriers that girls face every day and which prevent them fulfilling their potential. Communities need to work together to shape a more equal and just society, that can facilitate lasting and positive change.
So with this year's BBC Children in Need appeal upon us, shining a light on child poverty and raising vital funds in the UK, let's not forget the needs of girls abroad.
There's no better time to sponsor a girl through Plan, visit www.plan-uk.org
Follow Dr Miriam Stoppard on Twitter: www.twitter.com/miriamstoppard
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Find out why you should sponsor a girl with Plan | Plan UK ...
We live in a time when we have to realise that all the charity work and donations by the "Live Aid" generation perhaps served to make themselves feel better but made no impact in the areas we hoped would change. Foreign aid, which is set to cost every family in the UK £479 per year by 2015 is funding all kinds of crime and terrorism. We should ask ourselves how large numbers of impoverished people from regions such as Somalia and Pakistan can afford to arrive at these shores when the average Brit could never afford such a trip. If the situation is to improve, it has to happen from within. We have sacrificed young lives to enable girls in Afghanistan to be educated only for them to have acid thrown in their faces by their own people. The way to empower girls in underdeveloped countries is not to shower them with money and help that will only lead to resentment amongst their neighbours and set them up as targets, but to promote changes to their corrupt regimes. You can only change a country if they ALL want to change. Perhaps we could get more value for money supporting more realistic goals, such as thinking of the estimated 2700 pensioners predicted to die this winter because they can't afford to pay their fuel bills.
Plenty of average Brits can afford to go to places like Thailand.
The Foreign Aid budget is less than 1% of GDP.People are not showered with money.
The aid goes to fund healthcare, education and other development projects.
If so, than I'd say *your* post is the most repugnant that I have ever read...
We strive to enable less fortunate members of our society to achieve all that they can strive to achieve, but still allow ourselves the selfish adherance to historical gender typing that has blighted our society since the Middle Arges.
We, as a nation, deny the true expression of complete equality in order to perpetuate the male dominant stereotype which has existed for millennia.
I am not, in any way, subserviant to feministic idealialism, but rather embrace true equality through the evidence of achievement shown by womenkind via the last two centuries.