Women’s Movement in India

📑 TABLE OF CONTENTS

  1. Introduction
  2. Historical Background of Women’s Movement in India
  3. Phases of Women’s Movement in India
    • Phase I: Social Reform Movement (19th Century – 1910s)
    • Phase II: Freedom Struggle (1910s – 1947)
    • Phase III: Post-Independence (1947 – 1970s)
    • Phase IV: New Women’s Movements (1970s – 1990s)
    • Phase V: Contemporary Movements (2000s – Present)
  4. Major Issues Addressed by Women’s Movements
  5. Important Organisations and Leaders
  6. Landmark Women’s Movements in India (Detailed)
  7. Laws and Policy Changes Due to Women’s Movements
  8. Approaches to Women’s Movement (Liberal, Radical, Marxist, Socialist, Dalit Feminism, Eco-feminism)
  9. Women’s Movements & New Social Movements
  10. Challenges Before Women’s Movements in India
  11. Summary

1. INTRODUCTION

The Women’s Movement in India refers to a long, continuous struggle by Indian women to secure equal rights, dignity, freedom, and social justice.
It has taken several forms — social reform, freedom struggle, legal mobilization, grassroots activism, feminist campaigns, and digital movements.

It fights against:

  • patriarchy
  • gender discrimination
  • violence against women
  • unequal access to resources
  • caste and class oppression
  • cultural and social restrictions

Women’s movements in India combine social, political, economic, and cultural struggles.


2. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

Women’s struggles in India began during the 19th-century social reform period under colonial rule.

Factors leading to women’s activism:

  • Spread of modern education
  • Influence of Western liberal ideas
  • Reformist leaders like Raja Ram Mohan Roy, Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar
  • Social evils such as Sati, child marriage, purdah, polygamy
  • Rise of nationalist consciousness
  • Post-independence constitutional guarantees
  • Global feminist movements (1960s–80s)

3. PHASES OF WOMEN’S MOVEMENT IN INDIA


Phase I: Social Reform Movement (19th Century – 1910s)

Goal → To abolish social evils and uplift women.

Key Features

  • Reformers focused on widow remarriage, women’s education, banning Sati, etc.
  • Women’s participation was limited but growing.

Key Leaders

  • Raja Ram Mohan Roy – campaigned against Sati (abolished in 1829)
  • Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar – widow remarriage (Act of 1856)
  • Jyotiba & Savitribai Phule – girls’ education, anti-caste struggle
  • Keshub Chandra Sen – women’s rights within reformist Brahmo Samaj

Key Organisations

  • Brahmo Samaj
  • Arya Samaj
  • Prarthana Samaj
  • Missionaries promoting female education

Phase II: Women in National Movement (1910s – 1947)

Women joined the freedom struggle, leading to political awakening.

Key Features

  • Participation in Non-Cooperation, Civil Disobedience & Quit India movements.
  • Women emerging as mass political actors.

Leaders

  • Sarojini Naidu
  • Kasturba Gandhi
  • Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay
  • Annie Besant
  • Aruna Asaf Ali
  • Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit

Achievements

  • Women entered public life.
  • Demand for universal suffrage.
  • Formation of women’s political organizations.

Phase III: Early Post-Independence Period (1947–1970s)

Focus shifted to legal reforms & state-led equality.

Developments

  • Constitution guaranteed equality (Articles 14–15) and freedom (Art 19).
  • Hindu Code Bills (1950s) provided rights in marriage, divorce, inheritance.

Limitations

  • Movements slowed due to belief that state would automatically deliver equality.

Phase IV: New Women’s Movements (1970s – 1990s)

(Triggered by global feminist waves & internal issues)

Key Triggers

  • Mathura Rape Case (1972) → nationwide anti-rape campaign
  • Report: Towards Equality (1974) exposed gender inequality
  • Dowry deaths and violence cases increased

Major Movements

  • Anti-dowry movement
  • Anti-rape movement
  • Women’s organisations’ revival
  • Movement for equal wages (SEWA, 1972)
  • Environmental movements with women’s participation (Chipko)

Characteristics

  • Autonomy from political parties
  • Grassroots, activist, feminist ideologies
  • Strong middle-class and student involvement

Phase V: Contemporary Movements (2000s – Present)

New Issues

  • Sexual harassment (Nirbhaya, 2012)
  • Workplace discrimination
  • LGBTQ+ movement
  • Body politics, freedom of expression
  • Digital feminism (#MeToo India, 2017–18)

Forms

  • Online mobilization
  • Street protests
  • Legal activism
  • Cultural movements

4. MAJOR ISSUES ADDRESSED BY WOMEN’S MOVEMENTS

  • Violence against women (domestic violence, rape, trafficking)
  • Dowry and dowry deaths
  • Female infanticide and foeticide
  • Equal wages and labour rights
  • Political representation
  • Property and inheritance rights
  • Education and employment opportunities
  • Sexual harassment at workplace
  • Reproductive rights
  • Caste-gender intersection
  • Environmental rights and livelihoods

5. IMPORTANT ORGANISATIONS & LEADERS

Organisations

  • All India Women’s Conference (AIWC)
  • Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA)
  • National Federation of Indian Women (NFIW)
  • Mahila Dakshata Samiti
  • Dalit Women’s Collective
  • Akhil Bharatiya Mahila Parishad
  • Jagori, Saheli, Stree Mukti Sangathan

Important Leaders

  • Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay
  • Sarojini Naidu
  • Ela Bhatt (SEWA)
  • Medha Patkar
  • Flavia Agnes
  • Ruth Manorama
  • Manushi collective (Madhu Kishwar, Ruth Vanita)

6. LANDMARK WOMEN’S MOVEMENTS IN INDIA (DETAILED)

6.1 Anti-Dowry Movement (1970s–80s)

  • Triggered by dowry deaths & domestic violence.
  • Demanded strict laws → Resulted in Dowry Prohibition Act amendments, Section 498A IPC.

6.2 Anti-Rape Movement (post-Mathura case 1972)

  • Mathura, a 16-year-old tribal girl, raped in police custody.
  • Court acquitted police – citing “she did not resist”.
  • Led to widespread protests → Result: Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1983.

6.3 SEWA (Self-Employed Women’s Association) – 1972

  • Led by Ela Bhatt.
  • Organised women workers in informal sector.
  • Fought for fair wages, legal protection, health rights.

6.4 Chipko Movement (1973)

  • Led largely by village women (e.g., Gaura Devi).
  • Symbol of eco-feminism.

6.5 Narmada Bachao Andolan

Women played critical role in resisting displacement.


6.6 #MeToo Movement (2017–18)

  • Exposed workplace harassment.
  • Powerful digital feminist moment.
  • Resulted in several inquiries and policy reforms.

7. LAWS & POLICIES MOVEMENTS INFLUENCED

  • Hindu Widow Remarriage Act, 1856
  • Abolition of Sati (1829)
  • Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929
  • Hindu Code Bills (1950s)
  • Equal Remuneration Act, 1976
  • Dowry Prohibition Act (1961) and amendments
  • Criminal Law Amendment (1983, 2013)
  • Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005
  • POSH Act (Sexual Harassment at Workplace), 2013

8. APPROACHES TO WOMEN’S MOVEMENT

8.1 Liberal Feminism

  • Focus on equality before law, education, and political rights.

8.2 Radical Feminism

  • Highlights patriarchy and male domination as core of women’s oppression.

8.3 Marxist Feminism

  • Gender inequality linked to capitalism & economic exploitation.

8.4 Socialist Feminism

  • Combines patriarchy and capitalism analysis.

8.5 Dalit Feminism

  • Emphasises caste + gender oppression.
  • Important voices: Ruth Manorama, Gopal Guru, Sharmila Rege.

8.6 Eco-Feminism

  • Connection between women and environment.
  • Seen in Chipko Movement.

9. WOMEN’S MOVEMENTS & NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

Women’s movements after the 1970s share characteristics of NSMs:

  • identity-based
  • decentralized, networked
  • lifestyle, dignity, culture-oriented
  • non-violent and symbolic
  • issue-based coalitions
  • digital platforms involvement

10. CHALLENGES AHEAD

  • Patriarchal social norms
  • Caste, class, and religious divisions
  • Low female labour force participation
  • Violence and trafficking
  • Online harassment
  • Political underrepresentation
  • Fragmentation within the movement
  • Digital divide limiting rural women’s participation

11. SUMMARY

The Women’s Movement in India is a rich, diverse, and evolving struggle spanning over two centuries.
It has transformed from social reform to nationalist participation, and later into feminist, rights-based, and identity-oriented movements.
The movement has led to major legal reforms, cultural changes, political awareness, and new feminist discourses.
Despite challenges, women’s movements continue to shape India’s democratic and social landscape.

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