Report
1 February 2018

Social norms and gender related harmful practices: Theory in support of better practice

Author: Ben Cislaghi, Karima Manji, Lori Heise
Published by: STRIVE
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Social norms help sustain a variety of gender-related harmful practices, including female genital cutting (FGC), child marriage and intimate partner violence. As development practitioners have sought to transform these norms to achieve greater gender equity, they looked to social norms theory for guidance. Preliminary efforts, mostly led by UNICEF, to address FGC, relied on game theoretical accounts of social norms[1, 2]. Today, due to an increase in the time and resources invested in using social norms theory for gender equality, practitioners are engaging with the wider constellation of social norms theories. The theory is indeed vast and varied, with multiple – sometimes contradictory – definitions of what social norms are and how they influence people’s actions.

This paper offers a short summary of social norms theory for those less familiar with it, noting that theories on norms emerge from many different disciplines and are multifaceted.