Unchained started and now leads a growing national movement to end child marriage
Child marriage, or marriage before age 18, was legal in all 50 U.S. states as of 2017. Thanks to Unchained’s relentless advocacy, that is changing. Delaware and New Jersey in 2018 became the first two states to ban this human rights abuse, followed by American Samoa in 2018, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Pennsylvania and Minnesota in 2020, Rhode Island and New York in 2021, Massachusetts in 2022 Vermont, Connecticut and Michigan in 2023, Washington, Virginia and New Hampshire in 2024, and Washington, D.C., Maine, Oregon and Missouri in 2025. However, child marriage remains legal in 34 states and is happening in the U.S. at an alarming rate: Unchained’s research revealed that nearly 315,000 children as young as 10 were married in the U.S. between 2000 and 2021 – mostly girls wed to adult men.
Here are the four main reasons we must end child marriage in the U.S.:
Child marriage can easily be forced marriage. The age of majority, when children become legal adults and get the rights of adulthood, is 18 or higher in every U.S. state. Children who have not yet reached the age of majority have limited legal rights and therefore can easily be forced into marriage or forced to stay in a marriage. They face overwhelming legal and practical barriers if they try to leave home to escape a forced marriage, get help from an advocate, enter a domestic violence shelter or retain an attorney. Perhaps most shockingly, children typically are not allowed to initiate a legal proceeding – such as seeking a protective order or even
filing for divorce – unless they act through a guardian or other representative. This outrageous legal setup puts the “lock” in “wedlock.” The
United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights categorizes all child marriage as
forced marriage.
CHILD MARRIAGE LEGISLATION: PROGRESS MAP
Click on any state or territory for more detailed information.
Child marriage destroys nearly every aspect of American children’s lives, including their health, education and
economic opportunities. It even undermines their physical safety: Individuals in the U.S. who were married before age 18 report
high rates of physical, sexual, financial or emotional abuse during their marriage as well as unwanted or unplanned pregnancies. And the impacts of underage marriage are even more severe for
teen mothers. Teen mothers who marry and then divorce are more likely to suffer economic deprivation and instability than teen mothers who stay single – and marriage before age 18 has a 70-80% divorce rate. Child marriage is recognized globally as a
harmful practice that disempowers women and girls in particular and hinders gender equality. The U.S. State Department has called child marriage a
human rights abuse.
YOUNGEST MARRIAGE AGE ALLOWED
Child marriage undermines statutory rape laws. In most states and under federal law, sex with a child that would otherwise be considered rape – in some cases, felony rape – becomes legal within marriage. In those situations, the marriage license becomes a “get out of jail free” card for a child rapist. In some states, statutory rape remains a crime within marriage. The marriage is legal, but sex within the marriage is rape. In those situations, the state that issues the marriage license sends a child home to be raped. At least 66,415 child marriages in the U.S. since 2000 occurred at an age or with a spousal age difference that should have been considered a sex crime. Of those child marriages, 90% gave a rapist a “get out of jail free” card, while 10% sent a child home to be raped. Either way, the marriage license made a mockery of statutory rape laws.
Child marriage can also be a form of human trafficking. Due to
loopholes in immigration laws, thousands of American girls are being trafficked legally for their citizenship, forced to marry adult men from overseas so the men can get a U.S. visa. Similarly, American men are legally importing child brides from overseas. Learn more
here about forced, arranged and child marriage in the U.S.
Join the movement to end child marriage in the U.S.
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