Sharp Decline in Child Marriages in India
- 09 Oct 2025
In News:
A recent survey by Just Rights for Children (JRC), a coalition of over 250 child protection NGOs, has reported a significant decline in child marriages across India. The trend underscores that legal enforcement, community engagement, and multi-sectoral collaboration can collectively transform entrenched social practices that violate children’s rights.
Significance of the Decline
- Human Rights Perspective: Child marriage undermines the fundamental rights of children—particularly girls—to education, health, and personal autonomy. Its reduction reflects progress toward SDG-5 (Gender Equality) and India’s commitments under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC).
- Health and Demographic Gains: Early marriages often precipitate early pregnancies, increasing risks of maternal mortality, low birth weight, and malnutrition. Delaying marriage improves reproductive health and supports demographic stability by spacing births.
- Educational and Economic Empowerment: Girls who remain in school gain greater social mobility and earning potential. Extended education creates a multiplier effect, reducing inter-generational poverty and enhancing overall human capital.
- Social Norms Transformation: The steep decline challenges the perception that child marriage is inevitable, showing that communities respond to visible enforcement and positive examples of girls pursuing education.
Key Survey Findings
- Assam recorded the highest decline (84%), followed by Maharashtra and Bihar (70% each), Rajasthan (66%), and Karnataka (55%).
- While three children were married every minute during 2019–21, by 2025, only three cases per day were reported.
- Awareness of the Bal Vivah Mukt Bharat campaign reached 99% of respondents.
- In 31% of surveyed villages, all girls aged 6–18 attended school, although Bihar lagged behind.
- Poverty (91%) and safety concerns (44%) remain major drivers of child marriage.
Drivers of the Decline
- Legal Deterrence: Enforcement under the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006—FIRs and arrests—proved highly effective. Assam’s proactive approach set a national benchmark.
- Awareness Campaigns: Nationwide outreach through schools, media, and Panchayats via Bal Vivah Mukt Bharat fostered community ownership over child rights.
- Community-Based Mechanisms: Karnataka employed helplines and Child Welfare Committees (CWCs), while empowering Panchayat Development Officers to register marriages, preventing around 2,000 child marriages in 2021.
- Multi-Sectoral Collaboration: Integration of legal, social, and economic interventions through state governments, police, education departments, and civil society reinforced enforcement and awareness.
Remaining Challenges
- Under-reporting and hidden marriages, especially in rural and tribal regions.
- Entrenched social norms linked to caste, honour, and family prestige.
- Economic vulnerability, which still drives early marriages in poor households.
- Institutional capacity gaps, including inadequate training and resources for frontline workers.
- Need for robust data to ensure reported progress reflects reality.
Policy Recommendations
- Mandatory Marriage Registration linked with Aadhaar and education databases.
- Targeted Social Protection, expanding schemes like Kanyashree and conditional cash transfers to encourage education and delayed marriage.
- Education and Safety Measures, including improved school infrastructure, transport, and security for girls.
- Grassroots Empowerment, strengthening Panchayats, CWCs, and helplines for early detection.
- Normative Change, involving mass communication, role models, and religious/community leaders.
- Monitoring and Evaluation, through third-party audits, longitudinal surveys, and state dashboards.
Conclusion
India’s decline in child marriages is a landmark achievement in rights-based social reform. The country must now aim to reduce prevalence below 5% by 2030, aligning with the UN Sustainable Development Goals, thereby ensuring that every child’s future is determined by choice, education, and opportunity, rather than compulsion.