The study, titled 'Young Lives' which interviewed 1,000 children (500 girls and 500 boys) at the age of 19 years in the two states, found that girls who had left school by the age of 15 years were four times more likely to get married before turning 18 than those who continued schooling after 15.
"28 per cent of girls in the age group of 8-19 years were married before the age of 18. Only 1 per cent of boys had married before 18 years.
The study conducted in 2013 further said girls from the poorest households were twice as likely as girls from the least-poor households to be married before the age of 18.
"Girls whose parents had the lowest educational aspirations for their daughters at age 12 were twice as likely to be married before age 18, compared with girls whose parents had the highest educational aspirations for them," the study stated.
Renu Singh, Country Director, Young Lives, India said "Ministries like Women and Child Development Ministry, Health Ministry, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Labour and and legal institutions like Panchayati Raj institutions and Child Protection Committees should actively work with young adolescents in preventing child marriages and early pregnancies.
