Ensuring children and adolescents who experience sexual violence have access to well-coordinated and free pyschosocial, child protection, and legal services can help ensure they receive all the support they need toward healing and justice.
No country received a full score for nationwide access to integrated government-funded psychosocial, legal, and child protection services such as through one-stop centers.
Three countries received a score of 0 for no evidence of integrated service delivery across sectors.
Most countries scored between 25 and 75 out of 100 indicating very limited, emerging, or established, but not universal, access to an integrated service delivery model with gaps in coordination or delivery across regions.
| Indicator | What it measures | Why it matters | Score range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.2 Integrated victim and survivor services | Whether governments provide and fund coordinated, services for victims and survivors of sexual violence such as for health, psychosocial, legal, and justice support, and the degree to which these services are delivered through integrated or one-stop models | A child who reports violence should be able to access services without navigating complex systems or repeating disclosures across different offices | 0–4 |
How to interpret your country's score
3.2 Integrated victim and survivor services (0–4)
| 0 | Very limited integration. Some agencies work together, but mainly through referrals. No one-stop service model exists. |
| 1 | A small number of one-stop centres exist, but they are not yet part of the national system and may depend on donor or non-governmental (NGO) funding. |
| 2 | Limited examples of integrated multi-disciplinary service delivery (eg, one-stop or Barnahus-type centers where multiple services are provided in a coordinated setting). These are few in number, not institutionalized, and may be donor- or NGO-driven. |
| 3 | An integrated service model exists with government leadership, providing coordinated support across multiple locations. This includes the provision of multiple services through one-stop settings in various locations, though coverage may not be nationwide. |
| 4 | Government-funded integrated services are established nationwide, with psychosocial, legal, child protection, and justice support available through coordinated one-stop or equivalent models across all regions. |
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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.
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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.