Assessing The Impact Of COVID-19 On People Vulnerable To, Or Already Experiencing, Forced Marriage: Survey on the Impact of COVID-19 on Staff at Forced Marriage Helplines, 2020-2022

DOI

COVID-19 and COVID-related decisions are having significant impacts on children and adults vulnerable to, and already experiencing, the crime of forced marriage. This mixed-methods project aimed to chart and understand this impact, inform evaluation of the UK's response to COVID-19, and shape on-going policy regarding the UK's pandemic response. This data includes the questions for and responses to a survey of staff at a national helpline for victims of forced marriage. It also includes visualisations of the data made for the published report.COVID-19 and COVID-related decisions are having significant impacts on children and adults vulnerable to, and already experiencing, the crime of forced marriage. Our mixed-methods project will chart and understand this impact, inform evaluation of the UK's response to COVID-19, and shape on-going policy regarding the UK's pandemic response. We consider the uneven economic and social impact of the pandemic, and the ethical dimensions of unequal impacts of COVID-related decision-making, on this vulnerable group, and seek to impact how civil society and the voluntary sector support vulnerable people. The government's Forced Marriage Unit (FMU) and the charity Karma Nirvana (KN) (which provides a national forced marriage helpline) have warned about the significant impact of the pandemic on forced marriage in the UK. We designed this project with both organisations, and will work with them to analyse quantitative and qualitative data about the impact of COVID-19 on those at risk of, or experiencing, forced marriage; and to record and analyse the challenges faced in the pandemic, evaluate the efficacy of mitigation strategies, and formulate new policies and practises for protection and response. Within the first 6 months, we will have co-created an accurate account of the economic and social impact of COVID-19 and COVID-related decision-making on victims of forced marriage, and the ethical implications of unequal impacts. We will then continue to chart the changing risk environment, while co-developing policy reports and recommendations for the UK government (including FMU), NGO practice responses (including KN), and other stakeholders, to improve the on-going response to COVID-19 and build community resilience.

An anonymous, online survey of staff working as call-handlers at a national helpine (7 people). We recorded this data via MS Forms, and made visualisations from some of the answers in Excel. A note about cleaning (a repeated response) is included as a comment in the deposited data file.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-855890
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=e2aba53672e7e511f5a084e5b342a7b71a8f806488e89d089b16665a3c379dda
Provenance
Creator McCabe, H, University of Nottingham; Hashem, R, University of Nottingham
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2022
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Helen McCabe, University of Nottingham; The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Numeric; Text; Still image
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage England; England