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The Effects of Slut-Shaming on Teen Girls
UNFPA Sri Lanka | Dear 18 year old me,
When Sanjeeva de Mel began studying social work, he tried something uncommon in Sri Lanka at that time: working in schools. By the age of 27, he had become the first school-based social worker in the country — and in the decades since, de Mel has left a lasting positive mark on communities, caregivers and children throughout Sri Lanka. From supporting child sexual abuse cases as a social work student to founding SERVE , a Sri Lankan non-profit organization, de Mel has worked to embed social work and its practices programmes for children, with a particular focus on girls and the most vulnerable. While leading SERVE, de Mel also became the Country Representative of a United Kingdom-based non-profit called Hope for Children, where he strengthened a programme to support and protect girls and boys living on the street, and created new programmes to help children of HIV patients, physically and mentally disabled children, and other vulnerable groups. As the fourth End Violence Champion, de Mel shared his experiences in the social work and non-profit field, and explored how to truly end violence against children — once and for all. I grew up in Moratuwa, a densely populated, multi-ethnic and religious coastal town south of Colombo city in Sri Lanka. Moratuwa is known for carpentry, fishing and trading.
School uniforms in Sri Lanka
In a country where women often still resort to rags as sanitary towels, campaigners are trying to break down a damaging taboo. I n a village school near the beach, Koshala Dilrukshi teaches English to students from Uswetakeiyawa, a Sri Lankan fishing village. On most days, Dilrukshi says, some of the girls in her class will be missing.
School uniforms in Sri Lanka were first introduced in the late 19th century. Today, school uniforms are almost universal in the Sri Lankan public and private school systems. All public and private schools maintains almost a singular uniform design in the color of white with few individual characteristics for boys and a few variation designs in white for girls. Introduced during the British rule the school uniforms has changed very little over the decades. In recent decades it has been a practice of the government to issue free uniform material to students annually, which is useful for poor children.