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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