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<dc:title>117 S634 IS: Girls Leadership, Engagement, Agency, and Development Act of 2021</dc:title>
<dc:publisher>U.S. Senate</dc:publisher>
<dc:date>2021-03-09</dc:date>
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<dc:language>EN</dc:language>
<dc:rights>Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain.</dc:rights>
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<distribution-code display="yes">II</distribution-code><congress>117th CONGRESS</congress><session>1st Session</session><legis-num>S. 634</legis-num><current-chamber>IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES</current-chamber><action><action-date date="20210309">March 9, 2021</action-date><action-desc><sponsor name-id="S252">Ms. Collins</sponsor> (for herself and <cosponsor name-id="S308">Mr. Cardin</cosponsor>) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the <committee-name committee-id="SSFR00">Committee on Foreign Relations</committee-name></action-desc></action><legis-type>A BILL</legis-type><official-title>To support and expand civic engagement and political leadership of adolescent girls around the world, and other purposes.</official-title></form><legis-body><section id="S1" section-type="section-one"><enum>1.</enum><header>Short title</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">This Act may be cited as the <quote><short-title>Girls Leadership, Engagement, Agency, and Development Act of 2021</short-title></quote> or the <quote><short-title>Girls LEAD Act</short-title></quote>.</text></section><section id="id7880dd42f1d24db99beee7cd859ebc75"><enum>2.</enum><header>Findings</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">Congress makes the following findings:</text><paragraph id="ide3060a56510745bd9a1f500a0a91957b"><enum>(1)</enum><text>Inclusive democracy and governance are fundamental objectives and critical foundations for sustainable development and global peace. Promotion of democracy, human rights, and governance is a reflection of fundamental American values and identity.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id0eff0a92445a40fe826a5e559a291042"><enum>(2)</enum><text>Democracies score consistently higher than nondemocracies on a broad range of socioeconomic development indicators, including infant and child mortality, life expectancy, primary school enrollment, adult literacy, female youth literacy, female secondary school enrollment, and access to clean water.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id0e3dc5f484bf4f4f8d8c349f3bf74303"><enum>(3)</enum><text>Women’s political participation results in tangible gains for democracy, including greater responsiveness to citizen needs, increased cooperation across party and ethnic lines, and more sustainable peace, as emphasized in the Women, Peace, and Security Act (<external-xref legal-doc="public-law" parsable-cite="pl/115/68">Public Law 115–68</external-xref>).</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id8e25f4907f7e46af979e20ed83d35b6f"><enum>(4)</enum><text>Women in leadership positions are more likely to resolve national crises without resorting to violence, sustain peace agreements over longer periods of time, advocate for social issues that benefit all, and allocate budgets to health and education.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id4da6e1f2488b42ad9912864d24bcde09"><enum>(5)</enum><text>Despite comprising over 50 percent of the world’s population, women are underrepresented at all levels of public sector decision making. At the current rate of progress, it will take over 100 years to achieve gender parity in political participation.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id41d625d8bbd04b408178cfdcda1e18ce"><enum>(6)</enum><text>Engaging adolescent girls more in civil and political activities contributes to increased political participation and women’s leadership around the world over time. Adolescents who participate actively in their community from early on are more likely to become engaged citizens and voters, with higher levels of ambition for future leadership positions in both politics and the private sector. Their safe, meaningful, and appropriate participation is key to creating democratic societies with informed and engaged citizens.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id1aa5da2236684d77b18f400e5749bdd9"><enum>(7)</enum><text>Adolescence is a critical period in a girl’s life, when significant physical, emotional, and social changes shape her future. Adolescent girls are particularly vulnerable to HIV/AIDS and other STDs and STIs, child, early, and forced marriage, and other forms of gender-based violence, including trafficking in persons and sexual exploitation, harassment, and assault, which are detrimental to their futures.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id4bb1a0f6ff91474fb6746bc55bbc9be0"><enum>(8)</enum><text>School closures related to the COVID–19 pandemic have pushed nearly 743,000,000 girls around the world out of school, on top of the approximately 132,000,000 girls between the ages of 6 and 17 already out of school.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id0f3e0d9684744b689b528b113b5036cb"><enum>(9)</enum><text>The economic impacts of the COVID–19 crisis are projected to put an additional 2,500,000 girls at risk of child marriage between 2020 and 2025, in addition to the 12,000,000 adolescent girls under 18 who will marry annually. The number one cause of death for adolescent girls 15 to 19 years old is childbirth, and 90 percent of births to adolescent girls 15 to 19 occur within a marriage.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idbc9833092f5e43a8b4f02fa9c7a51df8"><enum>(10)</enum><text>Every 10 minutes, somewhere in the world, an adolescent girl dies as a result of violence. A girl’s risk of dying as a result of violence increases from early to late adolescence. Violence is the second leading cause of death among adolescent girls globally. Girls with disabilities may face up to 10 times more violence than girls without disabilities.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id003de27882d64bb8aaddb8671b04f30c"><enum>(11)</enum><text>Empowering adolescent girls and young women in childhood and as they transition to become adults, investing in their leadership potential, and ensuring there are established pathways to positions of political leadership and civic engagement contribute to ensuring a world where women can thrive as political leaders and decisionmakers, in economic spaces and across society as a whole.</text></paragraph></section><section id="id78eda3f2cb234b06ad2e6991f5d323b7"><enum>3.</enum><header>Statement of policy</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">It shall be the international development policy of the United States to—</text><paragraph id="id5d3d5875e03f4c1b92a82d489434caa7"><enum>(1)</enum><text>promote and ensure that all adolescents from the most marginalized populations, including both girls and boys, are able to fully participate in society, and are specifically able to exercise their civil and political rights as agents of change in their communities and countries;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="ida89c45657ca54292aa66ff53332d2df1"><enum>(2)</enum><text>increase the capability of adolescents, particularly adolescent girls, in assuming leadership roles, holding decisionmakers to account, and influencing decision making at the household, community, and societal levels;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id0f30551518fb41f0ab7e1a91bc78c8df"><enum>(3)</enum><text>ensure meaningful engagement and consultation with adolescents, particularly adolescent girls, to ensure that United States foreign assistance initiatives, including the planning, implementation, and evaluation of projects, are effective and responsive to this input with a focus on country and community ownership;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idde2b71e98a2c44489c8bdab0bd0bd9b6"><enum>(4)</enum><text>ensure that consultation processes are transparent, voluntary, inclusive, safe, respectful, and responsive to structural barriers affecting adolescent girls’ meaningful engagement;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id6f826b0928c34fb1a4adb939dc2d7b28"><enum>(5)</enum><text>actively work to decrease discrimination towards, and the abuses of, the rights of adolescent girls, particularly among the most vulnerable populations; and</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idbf7895f8deaf4faa95295d15ac7365ea"><enum>(6)</enum><text>utilize evidence-based approaches and practices in developing such programs, including taking into account the role of family, religious, and community leaders in creating supportive environments, the identification of mentors and role models, and the creation of safe spaces for adolescent girls.</text></paragraph></section><section id="ida2cdac618ee44b1b8c0731d8c2f5734b"><enum>4.</enum><header>Strategy to encourage the civic and political participation of adolescent girls</header><subsection id="idae225527d9ea4c5692c50bed46ebd83e"><enum>(a)</enum><header>Strategy required</header><text>Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development shall jointly submit, separate from or as part of other public strategies, to the appropriate congressional committees and make publicly available a single strategy on strengthening the participation of adolescents, particularly adolescent girls, in democracy, human rights, and governance. The strategy shall include a detailed description of how each agency’s democracy and governance center intends to fulfill the policy objectives set forth in section 3.</text></subsection><subsection id="ide7c803037f8d4877b5c1d45dd0925ce2"><enum>(b)</enum><header>Elements</header><text>The strategy submitted under subsection (a) shall include the following elements:</text><paragraph id="id2397e2fe265f4ffeaed3da1d62b5a20f"><enum>(1)</enum><text>A specific implementation plan from each of the relevant Federal agencies that describes—</text><subparagraph id="id2a3168eb99744a869e5438a41d56f2df"><enum>(A)</enum><text>the anticipated contributions of the agency, including technical, financial, and in-kind contributions, to implement the strategy; and</text></subparagraph><subparagraph id="id580c9ae88414424194572ba3be374df2"><enum>(B)</enum><text>the efforts of the agency to ensure that the policies and initiatives carried out pursuant to the strategy are designed to achieve maximum impact and long-term sustainability.</text></subparagraph></paragraph><paragraph id="ida619bf92b3f74889bf3b5d8b0591484b"><enum>(2)</enum><text>Strategic objectives and activities, including social accountability, research, and learning, to advance the leadership, civic, and political engagement of adolescents, particularly adolescent girls, including a description of how such efforts will advance gender equality and reduce the distinct barriers that adolescent girls and boys each face, including the most marginalized adolescents, to their civic participation in existing structures, institutions, and the broader enabling environment.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id0e785133ec754a09b8c0c6017839983d"><enum>(3)</enum><text>Metrics, benchmarks, and a monitoring, evaluation, and learning plan to ensure the accountability and effectiveness of all activities related to the policy objectives set forth in section 3.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idfad3d718ddd54517be4eaf7b4acb5b9f"><enum>(4)</enum><text>An explanation of how such objectives and activities will be aligned with existing United States foreign assistance policies and strategies relevant to promoting global gender equality and women’s and girls’ empowerment.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id91f5aee6ce4e4b459ca897952f18596f"><enum>(5)</enum><text>An explanation of how gender analysis has informed the strategy and implementation plan, including the strategic objectives and activities to advance the leadership, civic, and political engagement of adolescents.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idd67165fe860e49f2a7f932d531c02dc6"><enum>(6)</enum><text>Plans for consultations with civil society that include girl-led and women’s organizations and other local civil society in partner countries, United States civil society, and other stakeholders to inform the development and implementation of the strategy, the creation of metrics, and the monitoring and evaluation of program interventions.</text></paragraph></subsection><subsection id="id0a70a57b6f8947ec9cb793ab7ca2a0ce"><enum>(c)</enum><header>Consultation</header><text>The strategy required under subsection (a) shall be developed in consultation with civil society in the United States and affected foreign countries, including adolescent girls.</text></subsection></section><section id="idcdb1433fd00648d992607caed835e42e"><enum>5.</enum><header>Implementation of foreign assistance projects, programs, and activities</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">The Secretary of State and the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development shall implement United States foreign assistance projects, programs, and activities designed to strengthen the participation of adolescents, particularly adolescent girls, in democracy, human rights, and governance, including—</text><paragraph id="id3a7e29c887ee4ace88861df5690b87e4"><enum>(1)</enum><text>increasing adolescent girls’ civic and political knowledge and foundational skills, advocacy, confidence, leadership and research skills, leadership opportunities, intergenerational mentorship opportunities, data and media literacy, and supporting their meaningful political participation and engagement in civil society and the public sphere;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id50f22151e30f415f92a7cd037bfc327a"><enum>(2)</enum><text>addressing barriers to adolescent girls’ and women’s civic engagement and political participation, and integrating engagement of men and boys, families, community leaders, religious leaders, schools, political bodies, government bodies, and other stakeholders to improve the enabling environment for adolescent girls’ civic and political participation;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idf66923b385b444d28a0f414b6892f749"><enum>(3)</enum><text>identifying and taking into account other barriers to adolescent girls’ civic and political engagement, including child, early and forced marriage, access to quality primary and secondary education, unequal childcare responsibilities, gender-based violence, early pregnancy and motherhood, adolescent maternal mortality, mobility constraints, malnourishment, displacement, lack of safe and reliable female sanitation and hygiene facilities, harmful social norms, HIV infection, physical, communication, and attitudinal barriers faced by adolescent girls with disabilities, and discrimination based on religious or ethnic identity;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id8488b153cfa149388b1e1bb7ac980188"><enum>(4)</enum><text>integrating feedback from program participants into the monitoring, evaluation, and learning processes of relevant United States departments or agencies;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id927b2028ad30473d81d6424323152bc0"><enum>(5)</enum><text>supporting girl-led and girl-focused civil society organizations with flexible, sustainable funding and technical support;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idad8279c52e5d42218b8c270cf23dd39f"><enum>(6)</enum><text>targeted efforts to increase work with partner country governments, alongside local civil-society organizations, and to build greater allyship among men and boys for adolescent girls;</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id34033e0710064845a8f8daa1c4a2076f"><enum>(7)</enum><text>ensuring age-appropriate and gender-sensitive child-safeguarding provisions for all programs that engage participants under the age of 18; and</text></paragraph><paragraph id="ide2f5883c7e8f4030bfca92c533f017c1"><enum>(8)</enum><text>ensuring adolescents, particularly adolescent girls, are provided opportunities and empowering environments so that they successfully enter adulthood with skills which empower their leadership within their communities or governments.</text></paragraph></section><section id="id4cf49c7a683c4e899c57d7b7ebd5dfc6"><enum>6.</enum><header>Prioritization of spending</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">The Secretary of State and the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development shall prioritize foreign assistance funding made available for democracy, human rights, and governance programs in accordance with this Act.</text></section><section id="id9d8ddea78a63469f85ba451fdbcb7ed7"><enum>7.</enum><header>Annual report</header><subsection id="ideff084f39b3e4b78a9b9884ac0abce87"><enum>(a)</enum><header>In general</header><text>Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development shall jointly submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report on progress made by relevant United States Government agencies towards increasing civic and political participation of adolescent girls and boys around the world, separate from or as part of other mandated public reporting on efforts to advance gender equality and adolescent girls’ empowerment.</text></subsection><subsection id="idb40a1811d1f8463099cfc50100262ac3"><enum>(b)</enum><header>Elements</header><text>The report required under subsection (a) shall include the following elements:</text><paragraph id="id38a47ab655014584826b8b2f0d89aa49"><enum>(1)</enum><text>An estimate of the number of people reached by all new United States Government-funded foreign assistance or development projects disaggregated by age and sex.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id77dd9ff70fdb48d58025eccfef91c486"><enum>(2)</enum><text>A description of how adolescent girls, particularly among the most vulnerable populations, are integrated into existing democracy, human rights, governance, and rule of law programming.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id3dc0a6ae6b26431d92d8b76122c0ca61"><enum>(3)</enum><text>The percentage of program participants that are adolescent girls in all new democracy, human rights, and governance programs focused on issues, including civic engagement, political participation, advocacy, research, and leadership development, the percentage of funds spent on those programs that focus on adolescent girls, and the countries in which those programs take place.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="id5c391582b85d42c49844edd551dcb315"><enum>(4)</enum><text>The number of democracy, human rights, and governance programs created to improve or that otherwise support civic engagement, political participation, and leadership of adolescent girls, the amount of funds spent on those programs, and the countries in which those programs take place.</text></paragraph></subsection><subsection id="id647b974c1c764b519fc5635d5a00967c"><enum>(c)</enum><header>Public availability</header><text>The report required under subsection (a) shall be posted and made available on a text-based, searchable, and publicly available internet website of the United States Agency for International Development.</text></subsection></section><section id="id2b99b5c1308c4a908c7c67d9c5fe9ec9"><enum>8.</enum><header>Definitions</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">In this Act—</text><paragraph id="id769959651f6d4754afc8aba17b1c8ffa"><enum>(1)</enum><text>the term <term>appropriate congressional committees</term> means—</text><subparagraph id="id98852a447d14454c9226f4f0302b0d9d"><enum>(A)</enum><text>the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and</text></subparagraph><subparagraph id="idc992a85793fc4e92acd1a88d936ad6ec"><enum>(B)</enum><text>the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives;</text></subparagraph></paragraph><paragraph id="idbd09543a5c124da68cb095e27cd405d5"><enum>(2)</enum><text>the term <term>foreign assistance</term> has the meaning given the term in section 634(b) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (<external-xref legal-doc="usc" parsable-cite="usc/22/2394">22 U.S.C. 2394(b)</external-xref>); and</text></paragraph><paragraph id="idec93a68ee34a47ae8ad0d5fdfa155d29"><enum>(3)</enum><text>the term <term>gender analysis</term> has the meaning given the term in section 3(a) of the Women's Entrepreneurship and Economic Empowerment Act of 2018 (<external-xref legal-doc="public-law" parsable-cite="pl/115/428">Public Law 115–428</external-xref>). </text></paragraph></section></legis-body></bill> 

