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Indicator

3.5 Compensation

Compensation

Countries
Scores
0
0/2
40
1/2
20
2/2
← None State-funded →
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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.

IndicatorWhat it measures Why it mattersScore range
3.5 CompensationWhether judicial or administrative mechanisms exist for victims and survivors to obtain compensationCompensation acknowledges harm and supports recovery — it should be a right, not a privilege0–2

How to interpret your country's score

3.5 Financial compensation (0–2)
0No compensation mechanism exists, or no information is publicly available.
1Victims 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)

IndicatorWhat it measuresBudget-line-to targetTemplate language
3.5 CompensationWhether judicial or administrative mechanisms exist for victims and survivors of childhood sexual violence to obtain compensationMinistry 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:

IndicatorExamples of components to estimate
3.5 CompensationVictim compensation fund capitalisation; administrative processing staff; outreach to inform victims and survivors and families of their rights; disbursement monitoring

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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.