Compensation mechanisms recognize the harm suffered and provide material support for recovery.
One-third of countries have government-funded compensation mechanisms in place to support victims and survivors of childhood sexual violence.
The remaining two-thirds lack government funding, but have at least one judicial or administrative mechanism through which victims and survivors of childhood sexual violence can seek compensation.
| Indicator | What it measures | Why it matters | Score range |
| 3.5 Compensation | Whether judicial or administrative mechanisms exist for victims and survivors to obtain compensation | Compensation acknowledges harm and supports recovery — it should be a right, not a privilege | 0–2 |
How to interpret your country's score
3.5 Financial compensation (0–2)
| 0 | No compensation mechanism exists, or no information is publicly available. |
| 1 | Victims and survivors have a right to access state-funded compensation. |
Data explorer
From indicators to budget lines
Use this as a guide to strengthen your advocacy requests and create targeted ‘asks’ to decision-makers within the right Ministry (for example: Foreign Affairs, Social Welfare, or Finance)
| Indicator | What it measures | Budget-line-to target | Template language |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.5 Compensation | Whether judicial or administrative mechanisms exist for victims and survivors of childhood sexual violence to obtain compensation | Ministry of Justice / Social Welfare: victim compensation funds, administrative reparations schemes | "Establish or adequately fund a compensation mechanism for children who have experienced sexual violence, with accessible application processes and timely disbursement." |
How to put a number on your ask
Break your ask into building blocks a Finance Ministry would recognize. Even a rough component-based estimate signals seriousness:
| Indicator | Examples of components to estimate |
|---|---|
| 3.5 Compensation | Victim compensation fund capitalisation; administrative processing staff; outreach to inform victims and survivors and families of their rights; disbursement monitoring |
Advocacy tools
Share your story
Share your experience, research, and success stories using the Index in your work!
Share your storyData 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.