What norms contribute to this practice?

Social norms are the perceived, informal rules that define acceptable, appropriate, and obligatory actions within a given group or community. Some social norms are specific to a particular context, while others may be broad enough to span multiple contexts; even seemingly contradictory norms may exist in the same context.1

The following examples represent social norms relevant to child marriage for adolescents (under 18 years old) that emerged from across the literature. They are not meant to be a comprehensive list of all relevant social norms or norms relevant in all contexts.  

  • Premarital sex, relationships, and even sexual harassment will damage a daughter’s reputation2–12 and the family honor.7–10,12–16 Early marriage is seen as a socially acceptable way to fulfill sexual desires among youth.5,7,9,12,17
    Meta-Norms: Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • Premarital pregnancy, including through rape, brings shame to the family.3,6,7,10,12,18–20 Girls can be pushed to marry their partner,9,10,12,15,21 or parents convinced to accept their child’s desire to marry to avoid stigma.7,12,19
    Meta-Norms: Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • In settings where marriage, including early marriage, is the norm for girls, having older unmarried girls may stigmatize families6,8,9,13,16,18. Proposals are accepted early to avoid this,8,12,14,16,22 particularly if the husband is considered desirable14,16,22 or when there are few eligible men.13
    Meta-Norms: Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • Norms that hinder the autonomy and decision-making of girls in marriage and other decision-making processes limit their agency to advocate for their own interests around marriage.10,12,16,22,23
    Meta-Norms: Authority; Control and Violence; Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • Norms around fears of girls being involved in sexual relationships or experiencing harassment at school may lead to parents not sending them to school.8,16,24 Marriage is then seen as the best option for out-of-school girls.8,13,16,18,21,22,24,25
    Meta-Norms: Gender Ideology; Protection; Social Status
  • Norms endorsing large families increase preference for younger brides, who are seen as more fertile or having more child-bearing years.6,8,9,16,26 Girls are believed to be ready for marriage at menarche or when they are biologically capable of conceiving.5–7,9,11,20
    Meta-Norms: Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • Children should be obedient to authority figures such as their parents;5,7,17 including married girls who are expected to obey their husbands.5,11,16 Marriages arranged by parents are a means to control their children, to prevent unacceptable or disrespectful behavior such as allowing children to elope or make independent decisions.5,7,10 In marriage, men prefer younger girls who are seen as more malleable and easy to control;3,8 older (unmarried) girls are harder to control.6,13
    Meta-Norms: Authority; Control and Violence; Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • Marriage is a means to gaining respect in communities. For girls, it is a way to fulfill the key roles of womanhood, as a wife and mother5,6,12,13,16,18; it may be seen as necessary for protection and provision.3,6,8,12,13,16,18,21,24 For men and boys, becoming the head of a household and bearing financial responsibility carries respect in their community.5,7,18
    Meta-Norms: Authority; Control and Violence; Gender Ideology; Social Status
  • For boys and girls, educational aspirations can be an acceptable reason to delay marriage.5–7,12,18,27 Boys’ readiness for marriage is determined by their ability to support a family, which may (or may not) be improved after completing their education.5,18 Girls’ education can be valued in itself, to contribute to social and economic prosperity for the household and community, as a means to increase her value as a bride, or in instances of excellent academic ability.11,12,16,20,27
    Meta-Norms: Control and Violence; Gender Ideology; Protection; Social Status

Section Resources

  1. Social Norms Lexicon.; 2021. Accessed July 13, 2022. https://www.irh.org/resource-library/social-norms-lexicon/
  2. Steinhaus M, Hinson L, Rizzo AT, Gregowski A. Measuring Social Norms Related to Child Marriage Among Adult Decision-Makers of Young Girls in Phalombe and Thyolo, Malawi. Journal of Adolescent Health. 2019;64(4):S37-S44. doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.12.019
  3. Taylor AY, Murphy-Graham E, Van Horn J, Vaitla B, Del Valle Á, Cislaghi B. Child Marriages and Unions in Latin America: Understanding the Roles of Agency and Social Norms. Journal of Adolescent Health. 2019;64(4):S45-S51. doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.12.017
  4. Prakash R, Beattie TS, Javalkar P, et al. The Samata intervention to increase secondary school completion and reduce child marriage among adolescent girls: Results from a clusterrandomised control trial in India. Journal of Global Health. 2019;9(1). doi:10.7189/JOGH.09.010430
  5. Biswas SC, Karim S, Rashid SF. Should we care: a qualitative exploration of the factors that influence the decision of early marriage among young men in urban slums of Bangladesh. BMJ Open. 2020;10(10):e039195. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039195
  6. Lowe H, Kenny L, Hassan R, et al. ‘If she gets married when she is young, she will give birth to many kids’: a qualitative study of child marriage practices amongst nomadic pastoralist communities in Kenya. Culture, Health & Sexuality. Published online March 23, 2021:1-17. doi:10.1080/13691058.2021.1893821
  7. Kenny L, Koshin H, Sulaiman M, Cislaghi B. Adolescent-led marriage in Somaliland and Puntland: A surprising interaction of agency and social norms. Journal of Adolescence. 2019;72:101-111. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2019.02.009
  8. Asadullah MN, Islam KMM, Wahhaj Z. Child marriage, climate vulnerability and natural disasters in coastal Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science. 2021;53(6):948-967. doi:DOI: 10.1017/S00219320200006449.         
  9. Melnikas AJ, Ainul S, Ehsan I, Haque E, Amin S. Child marriage practices among the Rohingya in Bangladesh. Conflict and Health. 2020;14(1):1-12. doi:10.1186/s13031-020-00274-010.      
  10. Mulumeoderhwa M. ‘A Girl Who Gets Pregnant or Spends the Night with a Man is No Longer a Girl’: Forced Marriage in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Sexuality and Culture. 2016;20(4):1042-1062. doi:10.1007/s12119-016-9373-y11.      
  11. Cislaghi B, Mackie G, Nkwi P, Shakya H. Social norms and child marriage in Cameroon: An application of the theory of normative spectrum. Global Public Health. 2019;14(10):1479-1494. doi:10.1080/17441692.2019.159433112.      
  12. Ahonsi B, Fuseini K, Nai D, et al. Child marriage in Ghana: evidence from a multi-method study. BMC Women’s Health. 2019;19(1):126. doi:10.1186/s12905-019-0823-113.      
  13. Elnakib S, Hussein SA, Hafez S, et al. Drivers and consequences of child marriage in a context of protracted displacement: a qualitative study among Syrian refugees in Egypt. BMC Public Health. 2021;21(1):674. doi:10.1186/s12889-021-10718-8
  14. Fattah KN, Camellia S. Poverty, dowry and the ‘good match’: revisiting community perceptions and practices of child marriage in a rural setting in Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science. 2022;54(1):39-53. doi:DOI: 10.1017/S0021932020000668
  15. Kohno A, Dahlui M, Nik Farid ND, Ali SH, Nakayama T. In-depth examination of issues surrounding the reasons for child marriage in Kelantan, Malaysia: a qualitative study. BMJ Open. 2019;9(9):e027377. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027377
  16. Dean L, Obasi A, el Sony A, et al. “He is suitable for her, of course he is our relative”: A qualitative exploration of the drivers and implications of child marriage in Gezira State, Sudan. BMJ Global Health. 2019;4(3):1-12. doi:10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001264
  17. Cislaghi B, Bankar S, Verma RK, Heise L, Collumbien M. Widening cracks in patriarchy: mothers and daughters navigating gender norms in a Mumbai slum. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2020;22(2):166-183. doi:10.1080/13691058.2019.1580769
  18. Schaffnit SB, Urassa M, Lawson DW. “Child marriage” in context: exploring local attitudes towards early marriage in rural Tanzania. Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters. 2019;27(1):93-105. doi:10.1080/09688080.2019.1571304
  19. Jones N, Pincock K, Baird S, Yadete W, Hamory Hicks J. Intersecting inequalities, gender and adolescent health in Ethiopia. International Journal for Equity in Health. 2020;19(1):97. doi:10.1186/s12939-020-01214-3
  20. Bell S, Aggleton P. Social influences on young people’s sexual health in Uganda. Health Education. Published online 2013.
  21. Petroni S, Steinhaus M, Fenn NS, Stoebenau K, Gregowski A. New findings on child marriage in sub-Saharan Africa. Ann Glob Health. 2017;83(5-6):781-790.
  22. Kohno A, Techasrivichien T, Suguimoto SP, Dahlui M, Nik Farid ND, Nakayama T. Investigation of the key factors that influence the girls to enter into child marriage: A meta-synthesis of qualitative evidence. PLOS ONE. 2020;15(7):e0235959.
  23. Prakash R, Beattie TS, Cislaghi B, et al. Changes in Family-Level Attitudes and Norms and Association with Secondary School  Completion and Child Marriage Among Adolescent Girls: Results from an Exploratory Study Nested Within a Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial in India. Prev Sci. 2020;21(8):1065-1080. doi:10.1007/s11121-020-01143-1
  24. Ramanaik S, Collumbien M, Pujar A, et al. ‘I have the confidence to ask’: thickening agency among adolescent girls in Karnataka, South India. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2022;24(1):16-30. doi:10.1080/13691058.2020.1812118
  25. Lundgren R, Burgess S, Chantelois H, Oregede S, Kerner B, Kågesten AE. Processing gender: lived experiences of reproducing and transforming gender norms over the life course of young people in Northern Uganda. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2019;21(4):387-403. doi:10.1080/13691058.2018.1471160
  26. McDougal L, Klugman J, Dehingia N, Trivedi A, Raj A. Financial inclusion and intimate partner violence: What does the evidence suggest? PLoS ONE. 2019;14(10):1-16. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0223721
  27. Wamoyi J, Mshana G, Mongi A, Neke N, Kapiga S, Changalucha J. A review of interventions addressing structural drivers of adolescents’ sexual and reproductive health vulnerability in sub-Saharan Africa: implications for sexual health programming. Reproductive Health. 2014;11(1):88. doi:10.1186/1742-4755-11-88

What other factors affect this practice?

Child marriage is closely linked with social, religious, and economic expectations from caregivers and communities and the role and influence of reference groups. The practice of child marriage can be influenced by other factors including poverty and families’ socio-economic status, the practice of dowries or bride price in communities, and disaster and displacement. Additional examples are below:

Individual

Community/Environmental

Section Resources

  1. Ahmmed F, Chowdhury MS, Helal SM. Sexual and reproductive health experiences of adolescent girls and women in marginalised communities in Bangladesh. Cult Health Sex. Published online 2021:1-16.
  2. Elnakib S, Hussein SA, Hafez S, et al. Drivers and consequences of child marriage in a context of protracted displacement: a qualitative study among Syrian refugees in Egypt. BMC Public Health. 2021;21(1):674. doi:10.1186/s12889-021-10718-8
  3. Kohno A, Dahlui M, Nik Farid ND, Ali SH, Nakayama T. In-depth examination of issues surrounding the reasons for child marriage in Kelantan, Malaysia: a qualitative study. BMJ Open. 2019;9(9):e027377. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027377
  4. Kohno A, Techasrivichien T, Suguimoto SP, Dahlui M, Nik Farid ND, Nakayama T. Investigation of the key factors that influence the girls to enter into child marriage: A meta-synthesis of qualitative evidence. PLOS ONE. 2020;15(7):e0235959.
  5. Steinhaus M, Hinson L, Rizzo AT, Gregowski A. Measuring Social Norms Related to Child Marriage Among Adult Decision-Makers of Young Girls in Phalombe and Thyolo, Malawi. Journal of Adolescent Health. 2019;64(4):S37-S44. doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.12.019
  6. Lundgren R, Burgess S, Chantelois H, Oregede S, Kerner B, Kågesten AE. Processing gender: lived experiences of reproducing and transforming gender norms over the life course of young people in Northern Uganda. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2019;21(4):387-403. doi:10.1080/13691058.2018.1471160
  7. Marcus R, Rivett J, Kruja K. How far do parenting programmes help change norms underpinning violence against adolescents? Evidence from low and middle-income countries. Global Public Health. 2020;16(6):820-841.
  8. Biswas SC, Karim S, Rashid SF. Should we care: a qualitative exploration of the factors that influence the decision of early marriage among young men in urban slums of Bangladesh. BMJ Open. 2020;10(10):e039195. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039195
  9. Schaffnit SB, Urassa M, Lawson DW. “Child marriage” in context: exploring local attitudes towards early marriage in rural Tanzania. Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters. 2019;27(1):93-105. doi:10.1080/09688080.2019.1571304
  10. Kenny L, Koshin H, Sulaiman M, Cislaghi B. Adolescent-led marriage in Somaliland and Puntland: A surprising interaction of agency and social norms. Journal of Adolescence. 2019;72:101-111. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2019.02.009
  11. Asadullah MN, Islam KMM, Wahhaj Z. Child marriage, climate vulnerability and natural disasters in coastal Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science. 2021;53(6):948-967. doi:DOI: 10.1017/S0021932020000644
  12. Ahonsi B, Fuseini K, Nai D, et al. Child marriage in Ghana: evidence from a multi-method study. BMC Women’s Health. 2019;19(1):126. doi:10.1186/s12905-019-0823-1
  13. Lowe H, Kenny L, Hassan R, et al. ‘If she gets married when she is young, she will give birth to many kids’: a qualitative study of child marriage practices amongst nomadic pastoralist communities in Kenya. Culture, Health & Sexuality. Published online March 23, 2021:1-17. doi:10.1080/13691058.2021.1893821
  14. Dean L, Obasi A, el Sony A, et al. “He is suitable for her, of course he is our relative”: A qualitative exploration of the drivers and implications of child marriage in Gezira State, Sudan. BMJ Global Health. 2019;4(3):1-12. doi:10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001264
  15. Shakya HB, Silverman J, Barker KM, et al. Associations between village-level norms on marital age and marital choice outcomes among adolescent wives in rural Niger. SSM – Population Health. 2020;11(June):100621. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2020.100621
  16. Cislaghi B, Mackie G, Nkwi P, Shakya H. Social norms and child marriage in Cameroon: An application of the theory of normative spectrum. Global Public Health. 2019;14(10):1479-1494. doi:10.1080/17441692.2019.1594331
  17. Melnikas AJ, Ainul S, Ehsan I, Haque E, Amin S. Child marriage practices among the Rohingya in Bangladesh. Conflict and Health. 2020;14(1):1-12. doi:10.1186/s13031-020-00274-0
  18. Raj A, Salazar M, Jackson EC, et al. Students and brides: a qualitative analysis of the relationship between girls’ education and early marriage in Ethiopia and India. BMC Public Health. 2019;19(1):19. doi:10.1186/s12889-018-6340-6
  19. Ramanaik S, Collumbien M, Prakash R, et al. Education, poverty and “purity” in the context of adolescent girls’ secondary school retention and dropout: A qualitative study from karnataka, southern India. PLoS ONE. 2018;13(9):1-22. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0202470
  20. Fattah KN, Camellia S. Poverty, dowry and the ‘good match’: revisiting community perceptions and practices of child marriage in a rural setting in Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science. 2022;54(1):39-53. doi:DOI: 10.1017/S0021932020000668

Who influences this practice?

Reference groups, particularly parents, as well as extended families and communities have an important influence on whether girls and boys marry before they turn 18. These reference groups sometimes hold individual attitudes or beliefs that do not support child marriage, although their actions uphold norms of child marriage.

Section Resources

  1. Fattah KN, Camellia S. Poverty, dowry and the ‘good match’: revisiting community perceptions and practices of child marriage in a rural setting in Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science. 2022;54(1):39-53. doi:DOI: 10.1017/S0021932020000668
  2. Kohno A, Techasrivichien T, Suguimoto SP, Dahlui M, Nik Farid ND, Nakayama T. Investigation of the key factors that influence the girls to enter into child marriage: A meta-synthesis of qualitative evidence. PLOS ONE. 2020;15(7):e0235959.
  3. Lundgren R, Burgess S, Chantelois H, Oregede S, Kerner B, Kågesten AE. Processing gender: lived experiences of reproducing and transforming gender norms over the life course of young people in Northern Uganda. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2019;21(4):387-403. doi:10.1080/13691058.2018.1471160
  4. Raj A, Ghule M, Battala M, et al. Brief report: Parent–adolescent child concordance in social norms related to gender equity in marriage – findings from rural India. Journal of Adolescence. 2014;37(7):1181-1184. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2014.08.006
  5. Marcus R, Rivett J, Kruja K. How far do parenting programmes help change norms underpinning violence against adolescents? Evidence from low and middle-income countries. Global Public Health. 2020;16(6):820-841.
  6. Ramanaik S, Collumbien M, Pujar A, et al. ‘I have the confidence to ask’: thickening agency among adolescent girls in Karnataka, South India. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2022;24(1):16-30. doi:10.1080/13691058.2020.1812118
  7. Biswas SC, Karim S, Rashid SF. Should we care: a qualitative exploration of the factors that influence the decision of early marriage among young men in urban slums of Bangladesh. BMJ Open. 2020;10(10):e039195. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039195
  8. Lowe H, Kenny L, Hassan R, et al. ‘If she gets married when she is young, she will give birth to many kids’: a qualitative study of child marriage practices amongst nomadic pastoralist communities in Kenya. Culture, Health & Sexuality. Published online March 23, 2021:1-17. doi:10.1080/13691058.2021.1893821
  9. Dean L, Obasi A, el Sony A, et al. “He is suitable for her, of course he is our relative”: A qualitative exploration of the drivers and implications of child marriage in Gezira State, Sudan. BMJ Global Health. 2019;4(3):1-12. doi:10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001264
  10. Schaffnit SB, Urassa M, Lawson DW. “Child marriage” in context: exploring local attitudes towards early marriage in rural Tanzania. Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters. 2019;27(1):93-105. doi:10.1080/09688080.2019.1571304
  11. Kenny L, Koshin H, Sulaiman M, Cislaghi B. Adolescent-led marriage in Somaliland and Puntland: A surprising interaction of agency and social norms. Journal of Adolescence. 2019;72:101-111. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2019.02.009
  12. Asadullah MN, Islam KMM, Wahhaj Z. Child marriage, climate vulnerability and natural disasters in coastal Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science. 2021;53(6):948-967. doi:DOI: 10.1017/S0021932020000644
  13. Cislaghi B, Mackie G, Nkwi P, Shakya H. Social norms and child marriage in Cameroon: An application of the theory of normative spectrum. Global Public Health. 2019;14(10):1479-1494. doi:10.1080/17441692.2019.1594331
  14. Ahonsi B, Fuseini K, Nai D, et al. Child marriage in Ghana: evidence from a multi-method study. BMC Women’s Health. 2019;19(1):126. doi:10.1186/s12905-019-0823-1
  15. Melnikas AJ, Ainul S, Ehsan I, Haque E, Amin S. Child marriage practices among the Rohingya in Bangladesh. Conflict and Health. 2020;14(1):1-12. doi:10.1186/s13031-020-00274-0
  16. Kohno A, Dahlui M, Nik Farid ND, Ali SH, Nakayama T. In-depth examination of issues surrounding the reasons for child marriage in Kelantan, Malaysia: a qualitative study. BMJ Open. 2019;9(9):e027377. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027377
  17. Shakya HB, Silverman J, Barker KM, et al. Associations between village-level norms on marital age and marital choice outcomes among adolescent wives in rural Niger. SSM – Population Health. 2020;11(June):100621. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2020.100621

Selected interventions addressing norms and behaviors

  • The Adolescent Girls’ Empowerment Program (AGEP) was designed and implemented by the Population Council, YWCA, Making Cents International, the National Savings and Credit Bank of Zambia (Natsave) and the Zambian Ministry of Health in four provinces of Zambia. This program aimed to build girls’ economic and social assets, with the theory that this would lead to healthy change across a set of outcomes including early marriage, adolescent pregnancy, sexual risk-taking, and transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. The intervention consisted of three components; weekly discussions, health service vouchers, and bank accounts. Weekly ‘safe space’ meetings for girls, separated by the girls’ age and marital status, were facilitated by a trained mentor from their community and provided a safe space to discuss sexual and reproductive health, HIV, and life and financial skills. A multi-arm randomized cluster design evaluation study evaluated the impact of the program 2 years after the completion of the program. Researchers found a positive effect on sexual and reproductive health knowledge, financial literacy, saving behavior, self-efficacy and transactional sex, but no effect on delaying marriage or on gender norms or attitudes. Limitations of the program’s impact included low attendance from participants and broader interpersonal and community obstacles, such as a family’s low socio-economic status and norms around gender and violence.1,2
  • The Samata intervention was implemented as part of the STRIVE consortium at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in Karnataka state, India from 2014-2017. This multi-level intervention was designed to address barriers that prevent girls from staying in school and delaying marriage. Barriers include family poverty and gender norms that devalue girls’ education leading to removing daughters from school early, arranging earlier marriages and/or voluntarily dedicating them as sex workers as part of a cultural religious tradition in this setting. Intervention components included establishing safe spaces for girls to meet, academic tutoring for girls, forming boys’ groups to discuss girls’ rights, engaging parents to value education and rethink norms around early marriage, and linking intervention families to government incentives for girls schooling. The intervention also worked with schools to sensitize them to the value of girls’ education and safety and strengthen governance and student tracking systems. The program was evaluated through a randomized control trial which found no difference between rates of school dropout and early marriage for girls in the control and intervention groups. However, a nested qualitative study done midway through the evaluation found parents reported high educational aspirations for their daughters. Concurrent government programs to improve educational outcomes and decrease child marriage in both control and intervention sites limited ability to assess program impact.3–6

Section Resources

  1. Austrian K, Soler-Hampejsek E, Behrman JR, et al. The impact of the Adolescent Girls Empowerment Program (AGEP) on short and long term social, economic, education and fertility outcomes: A cluster randomized controlled trial in Zambia. BMC Public Health. 2020;20(1):1-15. doi:10.1186/s12889-020-08468-0
  2. Hewett PC, Austrian K, Soler-Hampejsek E, Behrman JR, Bozzani F, Jackson-Hachonda NA. Cluster randomized evaluation of Adolescent Girls Empowerment Programme (AGEP): study protocol. BMC Public Health. 2017;17(1):1-12.
  3. Prakash R, Beattie TS, Cislaghi B, et al. Changes in Family-Level Attitudes and Norms and Association with Secondary School  Completion and Child Marriage Among Adolescent Girls: Results from an Exploratory Study Nested Within a Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial in India. Prev Sci. 2020;21(8):1065-1080. doi:10.1007/s11121-020-01143-1
  4. Prakash R, Beattie TS, Javalkar P, et al. The Samata intervention to increase secondary school completion and reduce child marriage among adolescent girls: Results from a clusterrandomised control trial in India. Journal of Global Health. 2019;9(1). doi:10.7189/JOGH.09.010430
  5. Ramanaik S, Collumbien M, Prakash R, et al. Education, poverty and “purity” in the context of adolescent girls’ secondary school retention and dropout: A qualitative study from karnataka, southern India. PLoS ONE. 2018;13(9):1-22. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0202470
  6. Ramanaik S, Collumbien M, Pujar A, et al. ‘I have the confidence to ask’: thickening agency among adolescent girls in Karnataka, South India. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 2022;24(1):16-30. doi:10.1080/13691058.2020.1812118