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PUBLIC LAW 116–338—JAN. 13, 2021
MALALA YOUSAFZAI
SCHOLARSHIP ACT
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134 STAT. 5122
PUBLIC LAW 116–338—JAN. 13, 2021
Public Law 116–338
116th Congress
An Act
To expand the number of scholarships available to Pakistani women under the
Merit and Needs-Based Scholarship Program.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ‘‘Malala Yousafzai Scholarship
Act’’.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress makes the following findings:
(1) In late 2008, Malala Yousafzai began making the case
for access to education for women and girls despite objections
from the Pakistani Taliban. On October 9, 2012, Malala was
shot in the head by Pakistani Taliban on her way home from
school.
(2) In 2013, Malala Yousafzai and her father Ziauddin
Yousafzai co-founded the Malala Fund. The Malala Fund works
to secure 12 years of free, safe, and quality education for
all girls. Completion of a full 12-year cycle of primary and
secondary education ensures a pipeline of girls able to pursue
higher education.
(3) On July 12, 2013, Malala delivered a speech before
the United Nations General Assembly calling for expanded
access to education for women and girls across the globe. She
said, ‘‘[L]et us wage a glorious struggle against illiteracy, pov-
erty, and terrorism. Let us pick up our books and our pens.
They are the most powerful weapons * * *. Education is the
only solution.’’.
(4) On October 10, 2014, Malala Yousafzai became the
co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for her ‘‘struggle against
the suppression of children and young people and for the right
of all children to education’’.
(5) According to the United Nations 2016 Global Education
Monitoring Report, more than 130 million girls worldwide are
out of school. 15 million girls of primary-school age will never
enter a classroom. As of 2016, at least 500 million adult women
across the globe are illiterate.
(6) According to the World Bank, ‘‘Girls’ education is a
strategic development priority. Better educated women tend
to be healthier, participate more in the formal labor market,
earn higher incomes, * * * marry at a later age, and enable
better health care and education for their children, should
they choose to become mothers. All these factors combined
Ziauddin
Yousafzai.
Malala Yousafzai
Scholarship Act.
22 USC 8411
note.
Jan. 13, 2021
[H.R. 4508]
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134 STAT. 5123
PUBLIC LAW 116–338—JAN. 13, 2021
can help lift households, communities, and nations out of pov-
erty.’’.
(7) In 2015, all United Nations Member States, including
the United States, adopted quality education, including access
to higher education, and gender equality as sustainable develop-
ment goals to be attained by 2030. One of the education goal
targets is to ‘‘ensure equal access for all women and men
to affordable and quality technical, vocational and tertiary edu-
cation, including university’’.
(8) In January 2010, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton stated, ‘‘We will open the doors of education to all
citizens, but especially to girls and women * * *. We are
doing all of these things because we have seen that when
women and girls have the tools to stay healthy and the oppor-
tunity to contribute to their families’’ well-being, they flourish
and so do the people around them.
(9) In February 2019, the White House launched the
Women’s Global Development and Prosperity Initiative to
advance women’s economic empowerment across the globe and
reach more than 100,000 women.
(10) The World Economic Forum ranks Pakistan the second
lowest among all countries in the world evaluated for gender
equality. On educational attainment for women, Pakistan is
ranked the tenth lowest.
(11) In Pakistan, the rate of higher education enrollment
beyond high school for girls and women is just 9 percent as
reported by the World Bank. The global rate is 40 percent.
Less than 6 percent of women 25 and older in Pakistan attain
a bachelor’s degree or equivalent as of 2016.
(12) Factors such as poverty, early marriage, disability,
ethnicity, and religion can contribute to the lack of educational
opportunities for women in marginalized communities.
(13) According to the World Bank, ‘‘Higher education bene-
fits both individuals and society. Economic returns for college
graduates are the highest in the entire educational system—
an average 17 percent increase in earnings per year of schooling
as compared with 10 percent for primary school.’’.
(14) The United States provides critical foreign assistance
to Pakistan’s education sector to improve access to and the
quality of basic and higher education. Since 2010, the United
States Agency for International Development (referred to in
this Act as ‘‘USAID’’) has awarded more than 6,000 scholarships
for young women to receive higher education in Pakistan.
(15) The Merit and Needs-Based Scholarship Program
administered by USAID awards scholarships to academically
talented, financially needy Pakistani students from all regions,
including female students from rural areas of the country,
to pursue bachelor’s or master’s degrees at participating Paki-
stani universities.
SEC. 3. SENSE OF CONGRESS.
(a) IN GENERAL.—It is the sense of Congress that—
(1) every individual should have the opportunity to pursue
a full cycle of primary, secondary, and higher education;
(2) every individual, regardless of gender, socio-economic
status, ethnicity, or religion should have the opportunity to
pursue an education without fear of discrimination;
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134 STAT. 5124
PUBLIC LAW 116–338—JAN. 13, 2021
(3) educational exchanges promote institutional linkages
between the United States and Pakistan; and
(4) recipients of scholarships referred to in section 4 should
commit to improving their local communities.
(b) CONTINUED SUPPORT FOR EDUCATIONAL INITIATIVES IN PAKI-
STAN.—Congress encourages the Department of State and USAID
to continue their support for initiatives led by the Government
of Pakistan and civil society that promote education in Pakistan,
especially education for women, in accordance with USAID’s 2018
Education Policy.
SEC. 4. MERIT AND NEEDS-BASED SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM.
(a) IN GENERAL.—The USAID Administrator shall award at
least 50 percent of the number of scholarships under the Merit
and Needs-Based Scholarship Program (referred to in this Act as
the ‘‘Program’’) to women for each of the calendar years 2020
through 2022.
(b) LIMITATIONS.—
(1) CRITERIA.—The scholarships available under subsection
(a) may only be awarded in accordance with other scholarship
eligibility criteria already established by USAID.
(2) ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES.—Scholarships authorized under
subsection (a) shall be awarded for a range of disciplines to
improve the employability of graduates and to meet the needs
of the scholarship recipients.
(3) OTHER SCHOLARSHIPS.—The USAID Administrator shall
make every effort to award 50 percent of the scholarships
available under the Program to Pakistani women.
(c) LEVERAGING INVESTMENT.—The USAID Administrator shall,
to the greatest extent practicable, consult with and leverage invest-
ments by the Pakistani private sector and Pakistani diaspora
communities in the United States as part of USAID’s greater effort
to improve the quality of, expand access to, and ensure sustain-
ability of education programs in Pakistan.
SEC. 5. ANNUAL CONGRESSIONAL BRIEFING.
(a) IN GENERAL.—The USAID Administrator shall designate
appropriate USAID officials to brief the appropriate congressional
committees, not later than 1 year after the date of enactment
of this Act, and annually thereafter for the next 3 years, on the
implementation of section 4.
(b) CONTENTS.—The briefing described in subsection (a) shall
include, among other relevant information, for the most recently
concluded fiscal year—
(1) the total number of scholarships that were awarded
through the Program, including a breakdown by gender;
(2) the disciplines of study chosen by the scholarship recipi-
ents;
(3) the percentage of the scholarships that were awarded
to students seeking a bachelor’s degree or a master’s degree,
respectively;
(4) the percentage of scholarship recipients who voluntarily
dropped out of school or were involuntarily pushed out of the
program for failure to meet program requirements; and
Designation.
Deadline.
Time period.
Consultation.
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134 STAT. 5125
PUBLIC LAW 116–338—JAN. 13, 2021
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY—H.R. 4508:
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD:
Vol. 166 (2020): Mar. 3, considered and passed House.
Vol. 167 (2021): Jan. 1, considered and passed Senate.
Æ
(5) the percentage of scholarship recipients who dropped
out of school due to retaliation for seeking an education, to
the extent that such information is available.
Approved January 13, 2021.
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