Girl child: her rights and law

Soc Change. 1995 Jun-Sep;25(2-3):116-8.

Abstract

PIP: This article points out the disparity between India's laws to protect female children and their actual living conditions. It is asserted that the role of women needs to be strengthened and that equal rights are executed to the advantage of children. Equality must come at the very beginning of life. Girl children need access to health, nutrition, education, and other basic services. In India, girls are guaranteed an equal right to education, but fewer girls are enrolled in primary school, and very few girls go on to secondary schools. There is no enforcement of compulsory laws, which particularly disadvantage girls from poor families. Girls marry below the legal minimum age. Early childbearing shortens women's life expectancy and adversely affects their health, nutrition, education, and employment opportunities. Prevention of early child marriage should be strictly enforced. Amniocentesis is performed in order to determine the sex of the child and abort female fetuses. The Juvenile Justice Act of 1986 includes special provisions for the protection, treatment, and rehabilitation of girls under 18 years old and of boys younger than 16. This act protects girls trapped in brothels for child prostitution and protects any person engaged in an immoral, drunken, or depraved life. Juvenile Welfare Boards address the problem of neglected girls and offer special protective homes and supervision by probation officers. The act needs to strengthen noninstitutional services, such as sponsorship, family assistance, foster care, and adoption. Girl children grow to womanhood. Effective social development in childhood reaps rewards in adulthood.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent*
  • Age Factors
  • Asia
  • Child
  • Crime
  • Demography
  • Developing Countries
  • Education*
  • Evaluation Studies as Topic*
  • India
  • Infanticide*
  • Interpersonal Relations*
  • Legislation as Topic*
  • Marriage*
  • Population
  • Population Characteristics
  • Prejudice*
  • Public Policy*
  • Social Problems