Syllabus: GS-II: Social Justice

Why in the News?

  • India enacted the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act (PWDVA) on September 13, 2005 to safeguard the rights and dignity of women facing abuse within households.

  • As the Act completes 20 years in 2025, it is important to critically assess whether it has fulfilled its promise of justice and protection.

Need of the Act

  • Provided a broad definition of domestic violence: physical, emotional, sexual, verbal, and economic abuse.

  • Extended protection to married women, live-in partners, and women related by blood or adoption.

  • Emphasized civil remedies (protection orders, residence orders, custody rights, monetary relief) → focused more on protection than punishment.

  • Envisioned as a beacon of hope, placing safety and dignity at the centre of women’s rights in the domestic sphere.

Harsh Reality and Rising Cases

  • Despite its promise, cases of domestic violence have risen steadily.

  • 2024 NCW Data: 6,348 complaints of domestic violence.

  • Cruelty by husbands or relatives” = 31.4% of all crimes against women.

  • Persistence of dowry-related deaths shows law’s failure to deter deep-rooted patriarchal violence.

Structural Shortcomings in the Law

  • Does not address root causes → intergenerational cycles of abuse.

  • No mandatory counselling/rehabilitation for perpetrators.

  • Excludes LGBTQ+ individuals (heteronormative framework).

  • Remedies are rigid & one-size-fits-all → not survivor-specific.

  • Compensation & maintenance left to judicial discretion, no income-based guidelines.

Implementation Challenges

  • Protection Officers, police, magistrates: poorly trained, overburdened, and biased.

  • Act mandates disposal within 60 days, but judicial delays make this rare.

  • Poor coordination among Protection Officers, police & NGOs.

  • Rural women suffer most → limited courts, shelter homes, awareness campaigns.

Disconnect with Survivors’ Needs

  • Lack of long-term psychological support & trauma-informed care.

  • Orders (protection/residence) often temporary, unsustainable.

  • Law remains reactive, intervening after violence → lacks preventive measures.

Way Forward

  • Amend PWDVA to reflect realities of 2025.

  • Introduce mandatory counselling & rehabilitation for perpetrators.

  • Ensure inclusion of LGBTQ+ survivors.

  • Relief measures → case-specific & flexible, with clear guidelines for compensation.

  • Strengthen institutional capacity: trained Protection Officers, shelter homes, judicial infrastructure.

  • Improve coordination with civil society for effective enforcement.

Conclusion

  • PWDVA was progressive in vision but weak in execution.

  • Remedies are often temporary & superficial, failing to address structural causes of abuse.

  • To truly fulfil its promise, the Act must evolve into a compassionate, survivor-centric, and preventive framework, bridging the gap between legal ideals and lived realities.

APSC Mains Question

Q. “The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 was envisioned as a shield for women, but its implementation reflects deep institutional and social shortcomings.” Discuss the challenges in effective enforcement of the Act.
(150 Words / 10 Marks)

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