STOP CRIMES ON WOMEN; GIRLS ARE NOT OBJECT

STOP CRIMES ON WOMEN; GIRLS ARE NOT OBJECT

STOP CRIMES ON WOMEN; GIRLS ARE NOT OBJECT

AUTHORS – PALAK AGRAWAL & PURVIKA SHARMA, STUDENTS AT SCHOOL OF LAW, DEPARTMENT OF LAW (ARTS & SCIENCE), MANIPAL UNIVERSITY JAIPUR

BEST CITATION – PALAK AGRAWAL & PURVIKA SHARMA, STOP CRIMES ON WOMEN; GIRLS ARE NOT OBJECT, INDIAN JOURNAL OF LEGAL REVIEW (IJLR), 4 (4) OF 2024, PG. 742-747, APIS – 3920 – 0001 & ISSN – 2583-2344.

Abstract  

In  December  2012,  a  twenty-three  year  old  college  student,  who  was  given  the  pseudonym  “Nirbhaya”  (“fearless”),  was  fatally  gang-raped  on  a  private  bus  in  Delhi,  India,  galvanizing  the  country  to  swiftly  adopt  new  legislative  measures  and  catapulting  the  issue  of  violence  against  women  in  India  into  the  international  spotlight.  Although  assault  and  rape  cases  have  made  India  infamous  for  its  high  volume  of  crimes  against  women,  the  reaction  to  this  particular  incident  was  much  different  from  before.  This  paper  investigates  whether  the  governmental  and  societal  responses  represent  social  change,  as  indicated  by  changing  attitudes  towards  violence  against  women  in  India.  I  study  this  question  by  analyzing  scholarly  literature  regarding  the  factors  that  affect  collective  attitudes  towards  violence  against  women.  In  addition,  this  paper  examines  collective  attitudinal  change  in  the  nation  as  indicated  by  media  coverage  of  rape  cases,  crime  statistic  reports,  influence  of  women’s  movements,  impact  of  legislation,  and  public  opinion  polls.  I  find  that  despite  an  immediate  backlash  against  the  epidemic  of  sexual  violence,  the  response  has  not  contributed  to  a  complete  transformation  in  attitudes  towards  violence  against  women based on the indicators studied above.