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Country

Brazil

Scores

58.4/100
Overall
66.4/100
Governance and accountability
33.3/100
Prevention
75.0/100
Healing
57.7/100
Justice

Americas & the Caribbean

4th

Overall

2nd

Governance and accountability

8th

Prevention

2nd

Healing

6th

Justice

Shared rank — one or more countries have the same score.

Pathfinding Global Alliance

10th

Overall

3rd

Governance and accountability

18th

Prevention

6th

Healing

14th

Justice

Shared rank — one or more countries have the same score.

Ending Violence Against Children pledging process

13th

Overall

4th

Governance and accountability

27th

Prevention

6th

Healing

22nd

Justice

Shared rank — one or more countries have the same score.

G20

12th

Overall

5th

Governance and accountability

15th

Prevention

7th

Healing

13th

Justice

Background indicators

GDP per capita
10280.31
Gini coefficient
51.6
Rule of Law Index
0.5
Gender Inequality Index (GII)
0.39
Women in parliament
18.1
Gender gap in educational attainment
1.0
LGBTQ Equality Index
76.0
Birth registration
96.0
Internet penetration rate
84.46
Lead child protection ministries or agencies
3.0
Child marriage
26.0
Online child sexual abuse
18.2
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4th
within Latin America and the Caribbean
out of 9 countries
3rd
in its upper middle income classification
out of 19 countries
51
million children in Brazil
represents 35.4% of the region's total population under the age of 18

Fewer than one-third of countries, including Brazil, Argentina, Kenya, Nepal, South Africa, Venezuela, banned corporal punishment in all settings, while Australia and the United Kingdom have not.

 

This country’s score places it in the top third of those assessed in the Index

This high-ranking indicates ongoing and significant effort in establishing laws, policies, services, and accountability mechanisms to prevent and respond to sexual violence against children and adolescents. This country proves that strong systems and political commitment can drive meaningful impact.

Ongoing commitments in prevention, survivor-centered healing, and justice reform will be critical to sustain progress and ensure that protections reach every child.

The scoring provides a roadmap for further action. 

The Index evaluates countries against 23 indicators covering the foundational laws, policies, programs, and services governments should have in place to end sexual violence against children and adolescents. 

By using these indicators as a step-by-step guide, countries can make meaningful progress toward eliminating sexual violence in their country and improving their ranking in the next Index cycle.

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Data driving change

Third Richest Nation

www.bravemovement.org/campaigns/third-richest-nation

A world without childhood violence would be $7 trillion richer. This nation isn’t real. Its wealth could be. Brave Movement's survivor-led advocacy campaign at the G20 in 2025 pressured decision makers to invest in prevention, healing and justice to create stronger, happier nations.

#BeBrave G7 Scorecard 2025

www.bravemovement.org/g7

By evaluating each G7 nation’s progress on vital policy measures we're drawing global attention to the global, silent pandemic of sexual violence against children. This is a crisis that undermines the G7's commitment to building secure, prosperous, and equitable societies. Kids need bold leadership and decisive action now to be safe and thrive.

Break the record

www.togetherforgirls.org/en/press/a-record-breaking-event-now-governments-must-deliver

We broke the GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS™ for the most countries represented at a childhood violence summit! With 120 governments attending, this first ever Global Ministerial Conference on Ending Violence Against Children was the largest organized event to address this issue on a global scale. Most importantly, as a result, we also broke the world’s record of inaction against childhood sexual violence.