Why this chapter matters for UPSC: Women's movements, legal rights, political representation (103rd Amendment), domestic violence law (PWDVA 2005), and women's historical struggle for equality are critical GS2 topics. The 33% reservation for women in Parliament and state legislatures (106th Constitutional Amendment, 2023 — takes effect after delimitation post-census, NOT the 2024 elections) is current affairs.
🧠 First Principles — Read This First
Women have challenged inequality and changed the world — entering new occupations, gaining education, and organising movements for their rights — and the chapter's key idea is that women's equality has been won through struggle (against discrimination in work, education and society), with much still to achieve. Building on the idea that gender inequality is unjust, this chapter shows how women have fought for and achieved change. Historically, women were denied education, confined to certain roles, and barred from many occupations — and stereotypes held them back. Through struggle, education and movements, women have entered new fields (science, sport, politics, every profession), won the right to education and to vote, and organised (the women's movement) to demand equality and rights and to fight violence and discrimination. The chapter celebrates women who broke barriers and shows that change came through effort and solidarity — while much inequality remains. Grasping that women have changed the world by struggling against discrimination — gaining education, entering new occupations, and organising movements for equality is the foundational insight of the chapter.
Why this matters: women change the world (women's struggle, education, the women's movement) is foundational to gender and social-justice understanding — basic to GS1 (society) and GS2 (women's rights).
PART 1 — Quick Reference
Important Women's Movements in India
| Movement | Period | Location | Issue | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chipko Movement | 1973 onwards | Uttarakhand (then UP hills) | Against deforestation; women hugged trees to prevent felling | Forest conservation; inspired "hug a tree" protests worldwide; policy changes |
| Anti-Arrack Movement | 1992 (Nellore, AP) | Andhra Pradesh | Women demanded ban on liquor sales (domestic violence, family poverty link) | Led to AP Prohibition Act 1994 (partially reversed later); spawned women's SHG movement |
| Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) | Founded 1972 | Ahmedabad, Gujarat | Rights of informal sector women workers (vegetable vendors, garment workers, domestic workers) | India's largest women's union; model for feminist labour organising |
| Mathura Rape Case (incident: 1972; SC verdict: 1979) | 1979 | National | Police custody rape; Supreme Court acquitted police in 1979; led to nationwide protests by legal scholars and women's groups | 1983: IPC amendment making police custodial rape an aggravated offence |
| Vishaka vs Rajasthan (1997) | 1997 | National (SC judgment) | Sexual harassment at workplace | Vishaka Guidelines → Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013 |
PART 2 — Concepts & Narrative
Women's Access to Education — Historical Context
Historical denial of education:
For most of India's history, women were denied formal education — girls were married early; scripture was reserved for upper-caste men; learning was associated with female "immodesty."
19th-century reformers who changed this:
- Raja Ram Mohan Roy: Campaigned against sati; founded Brahmo Samaj; supported widow remarriage and women's education
- Jyotirao Phule and Savitribai Phule: Opened first school for girls in Pune (1848); Savitribai Phule = India's first female teacher; faced violence and social ostracism for teaching girls
- Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar: Campaigned for widow remarriage; Widow Remarriage Act (1856); promoted women's education in Bengal
- Pandita Ramabai: Educated Brahmin widow who became a scholar; wrote about women's oppression; converted to Christianity; founded Mukti Mission
Impact: By the time of Independence, India had women doctors, lawyers, teachers, and political leaders (e.g., Sarojini Naidu) — but a tiny educated minority against a backdrop of mass illiteracy among women.
Legal Rights and Protections
UPSC GS2 — Women's Legal Rights:
Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (PWDVA):
- First comprehensive law recognising domestic violence as a crime
- Covers: Physical, sexual, emotional/verbal, economic abuse; also covers live-in relationships
- Protection orders, residence orders, monetary relief
- Key distinction: Civil law (protection orders) as well as criminal provisions
- Implemented by Protection Officers in each district; National Legal Services Authority provides free legal aid
Criminal Law Amendments after Nirbhaya (2012):
- Nirbhaya gang rape (December 16, 2012, Delhi): Triggered nationwide protests; led to Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013
- New offences: Stalking, voyeurism, acid attack
- Minimum sentences increased for rape
- Death penalty for rape leading to death or leaving victim in persistent vegetative state
- POCSO Act (2012): Protection of Children from Sexual Offences; gender-neutral; covers boys and girls under 18; mandatory reporting of offences
Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017:
- Extended paid maternity leave from 12 weeks to 26 weeks for the first two children (private sector establishments with 10+ workers)
- Mandatory crèche facilities for establishments with 50+ employees
Equal Remuneration Act (1976):
- Equal pay for equal work regardless of gender
- Amended by Code on Wages (2019): Now part of the Wage Code; broader equal remuneration provisions
Women's Reservation Act (2023) — 106th Constitutional Amendment:
- 33% seats reserved for women in Lok Sabha, state Vidhan Sabhas, and Delhi Vidhan Sabha
- Takes effect after delimitation of constituencies and next census (effectively ~2029 elections)
- Rotated every election cycle
- Applies to reserved SC/ST seats too (1/3 of those reserved for women)
Women in Politics
UPSC GS2 — Women's Political Representation:
Current representation (as of 2025):
- Lok Sabha: ~78 women MPs (14.4% of 543) in 17th Lok Sabha (2019–24); 18th Lok Sabha (2024–29): ~74 women (13.6%) — marginal decrease
- State assemblies: Average ~10–12% women MLAs nationally
- India's global ranking: ~141st out of 190+ countries in women's parliamentary representation (IPU 2025 data)
- Contrast: Rwanda (64% women in parliament); Scandinavian countries (40–45%)
Local body representation:
- 73rd and 74th Amendments mandated 1/3 reservation for women in PRIs and urban local bodies
- Many states have increased to 50% reservation (Bihar, Rajasthan, UP, Uttarakhand, Madhya Pradesh)
- ~14.5 lakh elected women representatives at local body level
- This "training ground" has produced significant political leadership
Obstacles to women's political participation:
- Lack of financial resources for campaigns
- Safety concerns (political violence against women candidates)
- Patriarchal party structures (tickets not given to women)
- "Proxy representation" — women elected in reservation seats but their husbands/"pradhans' husbands" (Pradhan Pati syndrome) exercise power
Women in constitutional offices:
- President: Pratibha Patil (2007–2012); Droupadi Murmu (2022–present) — first Adivasi President
- Chief Ministers: Several women; Mamata Banerjee (West Bengal), YS Sharmila, others
- Chief Justice of India: No woman CJI as of 2025; but Justice BV Nagarathna is likely to be India's first woman CJI in 2027
[Additional] 5a. POSH Act 2013 — Full Framework (ICC, LCC, Penalties, SHe-Box)
The chapter mentions the Vishaka Guidelines (1997) → POSH Act 2013 but lacks the full implementation framework — ICC/LCC composition thresholds, timelines, penalties, and the SHe-Box portal — which are directly tested in UPSC GS2 and GS3 (Social Justice, Governance).
Key Terms — POSH Act 2013:
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| POSH Act | Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013 — Presidential assent April 23, 2013; came into force December 9, 2013; replaced Vishaka Guidelines (1997) with a statutory framework |
| ICC | Internal Complaints Committee — mandatory committee at every workplace with 10 or more employees; minimum 4 members; Presiding Officer must be a senior woman employee; at least 50% members must be women; 1 external NGO member required |
| LCC | Local Complaints Committee — constituted by the District Officer for each district; handles complaints from workplaces with fewer than 10 employees, domestic workers, and complaints against the employer |
| SHe-Box | Sexual Harassment electronic-Box — online portal launched by Ministry of Women and Child Development (2017); women can file complaints online; all workplaces must register their ICC on SHe-Box |
| Workplace (POSH) | Broadly defined — includes any office/unit; transport during employment; dwelling places (covering domestic workers); hospitals; educational institutions; even places visited during official duty |
[Additional] POSH Act 2013 — Full Framework (GS2 — Governance / Social Justice):
POSH Act 2013 — background and key dates:
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Vishaka Guidelines | Issued by Supreme Court in Vishaka v. State of Rajasthan (1997) — treated as mandatory till legislation enacted |
| POSH Act assent | April 23, 2013 |
| POSH Act in force | December 9, 2013 |
| Nodal ministry | Ministry of Women and Child Development |
| Basis | Gave statutory form to Vishaka Guidelines; extends to unorganized sector via LCC |
Sexual harassment — five defined forms of conduct:
- Physical contact and advances
- Demand or request for sexual favours
- Making sexually coloured remarks
- Showing pornography
- Any other unwelcome physical, verbal, or non-verbal conduct of a sexual nature
Internal Complaints Committee (ICC):
| Feature | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Threshold | Every workplace with ≥ 10 employees MUST constitute ICC |
| Minimum members | 4 |
| Presiding Officer | Must be a senior woman employee at that unit; if none available, nominated from another unit/organisation |
| Women members | At least 50% of total ICC members must be women |
| External member | 1 member from an NGO committed to women's causes or familiar with sexual harassment issues |
| Tenure | Not exceeding 3 years |
Local Complaints Committee (LCC):
| Feature | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Constituted by | District Officer for each district |
| Cases handled | Workplaces with < 10 employees; domestic workers; complaints against the employer; unorganized sector workers |
| Chairperson | Eminent woman in social work committed to women's causes |
| Other members | 1 woman from block/taluka/municipality level + 2 members (at least 1 woman) from NGOs |
Statutory timelines under POSH Act:
| Stage | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Filing complaint after incident | Within 3 months; extendable by further 3 months if sufficient cause shown |
| ICC investigation (inquiry) | Must be completed within 90 days |
| ICC submits report to employer | Within 10 days of completing inquiry |
| Employer acts on ICC recommendations | Within 60 days of receiving report |
Penalties for employer non-compliance (Section 26):
| Offence | Penalty |
|---|---|
| First offence | Fine up to Rs. 50,000 |
| Repeated offence | Twice the penalty of first offence AND/OR cancellation/non-renewal of business licence |
| Non-compliance includes | Not constituting ICC; not acting on ICC recommendations; not filing annual report |
Annual report requirement (Section 21/22 + Rule 14): ICC must submit annual report to employer; employer files it with the District Officer. Content: (1) complaints received in year; (2) complaints disposed of; (3) cases pending > 90 days; (4) awareness programmes conducted; (5) nature of action taken. Must be filed even if zero complaints.
SHe-Box portal:
- Full name: Sexual Harassment electronic-Box (NOT "SHRI portal")
- Launched by Ministry of Women and Child Development (2017)
- Women can file POSH complaints online; centralised repository for ICC details
- Per Supreme Court direction in Aureliano Fernandes v. State of Goa: all workplaces including private organisations must register their IC on SHe-Box
- Website: shebox.wcd.gov.in
UPSC synthesis: POSH Act = GS2 Governance + Social Justice. Key exam facts: POSH Act = Presidential assent April 23, 2013 = in force December 9, 2013 = replaces Vishaka Guidelines; ICC threshold = ≥ 10 employees = Presiding Officer = senior woman employee = 50% women members = 1 external NGO member; LCC = for < 10 employees + domestic workers + complaints against employer = constituted by District Officer; inquiry must complete in 90 days; employer action in 60 days; penalty = Rs. 50,000 first offence + licence cancellation for repeat; SHe-Box = MoWCD portal (2017). Prelims trap: ICC investigation timeline = 90 days (NOT 60 days — 60 days is the employer's deadline to act on the report; 90 days is for ICC to complete inquiry); SHe-Box (NOT "SHRI portal"); LCC is constituted by the District Officer (NOT by the employer — employers constitute ICC; the District Officer constitutes LCC for each district); the threshold for ICC is ≥ 10 employees (NOT ≥ 50 — the maternity/creche threshold is 50; POSH ICC threshold is 10); both Presiding Officer AND 50% members must be women (two separate requirements — not just the Presiding Officer).
[Additional] 5b. Nirbhaya Fund, Section 498A/BNS 85, POCSO 2019 Amendment, and Women's Reservation Bill History
The chapter covers the Nirbhaya case and 106th Amendment briefly but lacks the legislative response details — Nirbhaya Fund corpus, One Stop Centres, BNS equivalents of IPC provisions, POCSO 2019 amendment, and the Women's Reservation Bill's 27-year history — directly tested in UPSC GS2.
Key Terms — Women's Legal Protections:
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Nirbhaya Fund | Non-lapsable fund established in Union Budget 2013-14 after December 2012 Delhi gang rape; total cumulative allocation = Rs. 7,712.85 crore (up to 2024-25); funds OSCs, CCTV, ERSS 112, FSLs, fast-track courts |
| One Stop Centres (OSC) | Also called Sakhi Centres; 100% centrally funded from Nirbhaya Fund via Mission Shakti > SAMBAL; 854 OSCs operational (July 2025); aided 12.20 lakh women; provide emergency response, FIR assistance, medical care, legal aid, shelter, counselling |
| Section 498A IPC → BNS 85 | IPC Section 498A (cruelty by husband/relatives) = Section 85 of Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023; Section 86 BNS separately defines "cruelty" (new feature); punishment = up to 3 years + fine; cognizable, non-bailable, non-compoundable |
| POCSO 2019 Amendment | Raised minimum punishment for penetrative sexual assault from 7 → 10 years; for penetrative assault on child below 16 years: minimum 20 years to life; aggravated penetrative sexual assault (Section 6) = minimum 20 years to life, or death penalty |
| 106th Amendment 2023 | Also called Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam; women's reservation bill finally enacted after a 27-year journey (first introduced 1996 as 81st Amendment Bill); 33% reservation in Lok Sabha + Vidhan Sabhas |
[Additional] Nirbhaya Fund, BNS Provisions, POCSO 2019, and Women's Reservation Bill History (GS2 — Social Justice / Polity):
Nirbhaya Fund — complete data:
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Established | Union Budget 2013-14 (announced by Finance Minister P. Chidambaram) |
| Initial corpus | Rs. 1,000 crore |
| Total cumulative allocation (up to 2024-25) | Rs. 7,712.85 crore |
| Amount released/utilized | Rs. 5,846.08 crore (~76% of total allocation) |
| Nature | Non-lapsable (unspent amounts carry forward) |
| Key schemes funded | One Stop Centres, ERSS/112, CCTV surveillance, FSL upgrades, Fast-Track Courts (rape + POCSO), Nirbhaya buses, Cyber crime prevention |
One Stop Centres (Sakhi Centres) — current data:
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Operational OSCs | 854 (July 31, 2025) |
| Women aided | 12,20,589 (12.20 lakh) |
| Funding | 100% central; from Nirbhaya Fund via Mission Shakti SAMBAL |
| Services | Emergency response, FIR assistance, medical aid, psychosocial counselling, legal aid, temporary shelter, video conferencing |
IPC → BNS: Key women's provisions:
| IPC Section | Subject | BNS 2023 Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| Section 375 | Rape | Section 63 |
| Section 376 | Punishment for rape | Section 64 |
| Section 376D | Gang rape | Section 70 |
| Section 498A | Cruelty by husband/relatives | Section 85 |
| — (new) | Definition of cruelty | Section 86 (new — IPC 498A had no definition) |
| Section 354 | Assault on woman | Section 74 |
| Section 354A | Sexual harassment | Section 75 |
| Section 354B | Assault to disrobe | Section 76 |
| Section 354C | Voyeurism | Section 77 |
| Section 354D | Stalking | Section 78 |
POCSO Amendment Act 2019 — key changes:
| Provision | POCSO 2012 | After 2019 Amendment |
|---|---|---|
| Penetrative sexual assault (Section 4) | Min 7 years, max life | Min 10 years, max life |
| Penetrative assault on child below 16 | Min 10 years | Min 20 years to life |
| Aggravated penetrative sexual assault (Section 6) | Min 10 years to life | Min 20 years to life, OR death penalty |
Women's Reservation Bill — 27-year journey:
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1996 | First introduced as 81st Amendment Bill by PM H.D. Deve Gowda (United Front government); referred to JPC chaired by Geeta Mukherjee (CPI); lapsed with Lok Sabha dissolution |
| 1998, 1999 | Re-introduced under Vajpayee government; lapsed each time |
| 2008 | Reintroduced as 108th Amendment Bill in Rajya Sabha by UPA-II |
| 2010 | Passed by Rajya Sabha (March 9, 2010); could not be taken up in Lok Sabha; lapsed with 15th Lok Sabha dissolution (2014) |
| Sept 19, 2023 | Reintroduced as Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 during Special Session of Parliament (new Parliament building) |
| Sept 20, 2023 | Lok Sabha passed — 454 votes for, 2 against |
| Sept 21, 2023 | Rajya Sabha passed — 214 votes for, 0 against |
| Sept 28, 2023 | President Droupadi Murmu signed → enacted as Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 |
| Name | Also called Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam |
| Effective date | After first delimitation following next census (delimitation frozen until 2026; effective ~2029 elections) |
Key features of 106th Amendment:
- 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha, State Vidhan Sabhas, and Delhi Vidhan Sabha
- Applies to SC/ST reserved seats too (1/3 of those reserved for women)
- Rotation every delimitation cycle
- Does NOT apply to Rajya Sabha or Legislative Councils
Women in 18th Lok Sabha (2024):
- Women MPs elected: 74 out of 543 seats = 13.6%
- Down from 78 women (14.4%) in 17th Lok Sabha (2019) — a decrease despite the 106th Amendment
- India's global ranking: ~141st out of 190+ countries (IPU 2025) in women's parliamentary representation
- Rwanda leads globally at 64% women in Parliament
UPSC synthesis: Nirbhaya Fund + 106th Amendment = GS2 core topics. Key exam facts: Nirbhaya Fund = Union Budget 2013-14 = total Rs. 7,712.85 crore = non-lapsable = ~76% utilized; OSCs = 854 (July 2025) = 12.20 lakh women aided = 100% central funding = Nirbhaya Fund via Mission Shakti SAMBAL; Section 498A IPC → Section 85 BNS (cruelty by husband/relatives); POCSO 2019 = aggravated penetrative sexual assault = death penalty (Section 6); Women's Reservation Bill = first introduced 1996 (81st Amendment Bill, Deve Gowda) = 108th Amendment Bill 2008 = passed Rajya Sabha 2010 = finally enacted as 106th Amendment Act 2023 = also called Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam = 33% in LS + Vidhan Sabhas = effective after delimitation post-census; 18th Lok Sabha = 74 women MPs = 13.6%. Prelims trap: The Women's Reservation Bill first introduced = 1996 (NOT 2010 — 2010 is when Rajya Sabha passed the 108th Amendment version); the bill enacted in 2023 was introduced as the 128th Amendment Bill but enacted as the 106th Amendment Act (amendment number ≠ bill number); 106th Amendment does NOT apply to Rajya Sabha or Legislative Councils (only Lok Sabha, Vidhan Sabhas, and Delhi assembly); Nirbhaya Fund = non-lapsable (unspent amounts carry forward — NOT lapsable); OSC = also called Sakhi Centre (both names used; Sakhi is the popular name); Section 498A IPC = Section 85 BNS (NOT Section 86 — Section 86 defines cruelty; Section 85 is the offence provision corresponding to old 498A).
PART 3 — UPSC Integration
The women's movement and women's empowerment are central to GS1/GS2. Women's struggle for equality — in education, work, political representation and against violence — is an ongoing social movement. India supports it through constitutional equality, reservation (⅓ in local bodies + the Women's Reservation Act 2023 for Lok Sabha/Assemblies), laws (against dowry/domestic violence/harassment — POSH Act), and schemes (Beti Bachao Beti Padhao, self-help groups). Yet gaps persist (low workforce participation, under-representation, safety). The women's movement (campaigns, awareness, legal reform) drives change. So women change the world connects to the women's movement, women's empowerment, political representation, and gender-justice policy — central to GS1/GS2.
Exam Strategy
Prelims traps:
- Chipko Movement = 1973 (Uttarakhand/UP hills); leader Sunderlal Bahuguna (Gandhi of the Hills); also Chandi Prasad Bhatt; women hugged trees
- Anti-Arrack Movement = 1992 (Andhra Pradesh) — led to AP Prohibition; spawned women's self-help group movement; connects to DWCRA and later SHG-Bank Linkage
- PWDVA = 2005 (Domestic Violence Act); civil law + some criminal provisions; covers live-in relationships
- Criminal Law Amendment = 2013 (post-Nirbhaya December 2012)
- Maternity leave = 26 weeks (amended 2017) — for private sector; earlier was 12 weeks
- 106th Amendment (2023) = 33% women reservation in Parliament/Vidhan Sabhas — effective after delimitation; NOT immediate
- Savitribai Phule = India's first woman teacher (not Sarojini Naidu or Kasturba Gandhi)
- POCSO = 2012 (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences); gender-neutral; covers children under 18
Practice Questions
Prelims:
The "Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act" was enacted in:
(a) 1995
(b) 2001
(c) 2005
(d) 2010The 106th Constitutional Amendment (2023), providing 33% reservation for women in Parliament and State Legislatures, will come into effect:
(a) Immediately for the next general election
(b) After the next delimitation of constituencies following the census
(c) When approved by at least 15 state legislatures
(d) After a special joint session of ParliamentThe Vishaka Guidelines (1997) on prevention of sexual harassment at workplace emerged from a Supreme Court judgment in a case related to:
(a) Gang rape of a social worker in Rajasthan while she was performing her official duties
(b) Harassment of a government employee in a central ministry
(c) Sexual harassment in a multinational company
(d) Campus harassment at a central university
📦 Revision Capsule
Hard Facts
- Women historically faced denial of education, confinement to roles, exclusion from occupations, stereotypes
- Through struggle + education + movements, women entered new occupations (every field), won education + the vote, and organised the women's movement
- The women's movement uses campaigns, awareness, legal reform to fight discrimination/violence + demand equality
- Support: constitutional equality, reservation (⅓ local bodies + Women's Reservation Act 2023), laws (dowry/domestic-violence/harassment), schemes; gaps remain
Core Concepts
- Women changed the world through struggle (not gifted)
- Education + new occupations + movements
- Women's movement for equality/rights
- Progress + remaining inequality
Confused Pairs
- Past (denied education/roles) vs present (new occupations) for women
- Women's movement (collective struggle) vs individual achievement
- Formal equality vs real equality for women
- Reservation: local bodies (⅓, since 73rd/74th) vs legislatures (2023 Act)
PYQ Pattern
- General/Prelims: women's movement; women's education/occupations; women's reservation
- GS1/GS2: women's empowerment; gender justice; women's movement; representation
BharatNotes