Applying Safe Behaviours Scoping Report - Preventing and Responding to Peer and Gender-Based Violence among Vulnerable Children and Young People
Understanding gender-based risks for children and young people and how their experience of peer violence can differ depending on their age and gender.
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Preventing and Responding to Peer and Gender-Based Violence among Vulnerable Children and Young People
Gender-based violence (GBV) remains a widespread and deeply rooted human rights violation
across the EU and beyond, affecting individuals of all ages and backgrounds. It stems from
entrenched gender norms, discriminatory stereotypes, and unequal power relations that
shape behaviours and institutional practices. GBV manifests in diverse settings—within families,
communities, workplaces, and digital spaces—and disproportionately affects women and girls,
although boys and individuals with diverse gender identities also experience harm. Research
indicates that girls are more frequently subjected to sexual and psychological violence, while boys are often exposed to physical forms of abuse (UN Women, 2021; EIGE, 2022).
According to multiple international agencies, including UNESCO, UN Women, the European
Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE), and the World Health Organization (WHO), GBV is multifaceted
and includes physical, sexual, psychological, and economic violence. It can involve harassment,
coercion, intimate partner violence, online abuse, and other forms of control and harm. These
patterns are reinforced by persistent structural inequalities and cultural norms that sustain power
imbalances (UN Women, 2021; WHO, 2021; EIGE, 2022).
Experts in the field (UNICEF, Plan International, UNFPA) emphasize that education, community
engagement, and policy reform are critical to addressing the root causes of GBV. This includes
challenging gender stereotypes and societal expectations related to masculinity, femininity, and
gender expression that contribute to violence and discrimination (UNICEF, 2016; Plan
International, 2020; UNFPA, 2019).
This Scoping Report has been developed as part of the EU co-funded project “Applying Safe
Behaviours: Preventing and Responding to Peer Violence and Gender-Based Violence Amongst
Vulnerable Children and Young People,” (2025-2027) which is implemented by SOS Children’s
Villages and Terre des hommes in Bulgaria, Italy, Kosovo, Romania and Sweden. Through the
scoping activities, we sought to understand gender-based risks for children and young people in
each of the project countries, and how their experience of peer violence can differ depending on
their age and gender.
The project is conceptualized through a socio-ecological model8 to GBV and peer on peer
violence prevention and response, recognizing that violence is influenced by and impacts multiple
levels of an individual’s environment—ranging from personal and interpersonal relationships to
community and societal structures. Interventions are designed to activate protective factors
across these levels, including capacity-building and awareness-raising for children, young people
and the adults and professionals who care for and work with them, collaboration with community
stakeholders, and advocacy for systemic policy change. By centring the needs and rights of
affected individuals, especially children and youth, the project aims to contribute to a more
integrated and sustainable response to gender-based peer on peer violence.
Global Report Date:
September 29, 2025
Region:
Europe & Russia, Global
Topics:
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