From infancy to adolescence: growing up in poverty
Abstract
The Young Lives study is following the lives of 12,000 children over 15 years in Ethiopia,_x000D_
Andhra Pradesh in India,1 Peru and Vietnam. It includes an Older Cohort of children born in_x000D_
1994–95 and a Younger Cohort born in 2001–02 (see Figure 1). By collecting information in_x000D_
low- and middle-income countries at different stages of national development, we hope to tell_x000D_
a broader story of what matters for children and when. Longitudinal analysis enables us to_x000D_
identify how and why factors early in life shape children’s later outcomes, and how inequalities_x000D_
emerge, giving insights for key entry points for policies to support children’s development_x000D_
and well-being at different ages. The design of Young Lives enables us also to consider_x000D_
differences in the outcomes of children at the age of 12, comparing the Older and Younger_x000D_
Cohorts in order to identify change between 2006 and 2013.


