In Ohio- the fight against forced child marriage continues
Advocates and survivors are urging Ohio lawmakers to pass bipartisan legislation that would ban all marriage before age 18, no exceptions. However, despite growing support, legislators have yet to vote on the bill. Currently, 17-year-olds can still legally marry in Ohio under certain conditions. Critics warn the law doesn’t just leave teenagers unprotected and extremely vulnerable to coercion, it covers up sex trafficking under the guise of marriage.
Current laws trapping children in abuse
Senate Bill 341 would raise Ohio’s legal marriage age to 18 with no exceptions. Research as well as survivor stories show that child marriage put children at risk of forced marriage, exploitation, and abuse. Indeed, in addition to potential power imbalances, child marriage creates serious legal and safety risks for minors.
Stephanie Lowry, a survivor from Ohio, said she was forced to marry a 19-year-old man when she was 16 years old and pregnant. Her experience is one of many shared by child marriage survivors in an effort to urging lawmakers to act.
Lowry and Fraidy Reiss, survivor and founder of Unchained at Last, told The Columbus Dispatch:
Girls are the ones who are suffering the heartbreaking consequences of Ohio legislators’ intransigence. Current marriage-age laws legalize and incentivize the trafficking of teens under the guise of marriage.
According to data analyzed by Unchained At Last, more than 5,000 teenagers were married in Ohio between 2000 and 2024. And about 90% were minor girls married to adult men. Rights groups and survivors argue that these marriages may look fine on paper, but in reality, they are not always voluntary. And because minors have limited legal rights, teenagers may struggle to escape forced marriages or abusive situations. Minors cannot easily sign legal contracts, file independent legal actions or access domestic violence shelters without an adult. Advocates say this creates what they describe as a “legal trap.”
