Deliver empowerment with structural support beyond verdicts for survivors.

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Deliver empowerment with structural support beyond verdicts for survivors.

Source: The post Deliver empowerment with structural support beyond verdicts for survivors. has been created, based on the article “What true empowerment of women entails” published in “The Hindu” on 19th August 2025

UPSC Syllabus Topic: GS Paper 1 – Social empowerment

Context: Amid the trial of former JD(S) MP Prajwal Revanna, a 47-year-old domestic worker resisted intimidation and delays. Her stance exposes a gap. India praises “empowerment” yet neglects unprivileged survivors after verdicts. The article urges structural support so legal wins lead to stable, dignified lives. She braved attempts at discrediting and crushing social pressures, yet persisted. Deliver empowerment with structural support beyond verdicts for survivors.

A case that redefines empowerment

  1. Survivors stand against power: She had no wealth, networks, or media. She faced legal muscle, smear attempts, and social pressure. She did not withdraw.
  2. From headline to jurisprudence: Her fight is not a headline. It strengthens jurisprudence for women who fear dismissal at police stations. It shows the law can protect the powerless.
  3. From silence to service: By asserting her rights, she performed public service. Her victory widens the path for future complainants.

The gap between rhetoric and reality

  1. Optics of empowerment: India celebrates women leaders. But empowerment talk often centres on the privileged, not on survival battles.
  2. After applause, abandonment: After verdicts, applause fades. Survivors return to hostile environments, face stigma, lose jobs, and carry legal debts.
  3. Structural support imperative: Empowerment must be structural—legal, economic, and psychosocial—so success in court does not become defeat in life.

Immediate state obligations

  1. Compensation schemes: Create state-funded survivor compensation. Other victims, including terrorism or industrial accidents, receive aid. Similar recognition should cover legal costs and ensure minimum stability. It should secure time to rebuild livelihoods and repay unavoidable debts.
  2. Specialised legal aid cells: Legal aid exists but is under-resourced. States should fund survivor litigation cells with advocates, forensic experts, and support officers, on par with public prosecutors. Access must be real, not only on paper.
  3. Psychological support as a right: Trauma recovery is a right. Provide long-term counselling, peer networks, and therapy. Fund through the state and CSR consistently.

Pathways to dignity and livelihood

  1. Guaranteed employment: Governments, PSUs, and corporates should create direct employment pathways for survivors of abuse-related legal battles.
  2. Institutionalise survivor expertise in policing: Train survivors as counsellors in police stations. They can guide women through the first reporting stage.
  3. Mentors and POSH adjudicators: Appoint survivors as community legal mentors and as members of Internal Complaints Committees under POSH. Lived experience adds empathy and provides income, institutionalising courage.

Why targeted support matters

  1. Exceptions require visible backing: In unreformed systems, these battles are exceptions. Visible support shows the state does not abandon resisters ever.
  2. Deterrence and confidence effects: Backing raises the cost of silencing and reassures potential complainants.
  3. Delivering empowerment, not declarations: Applause is easy. Real empowerment needs immediate economic support, long-term integration, and legitimised survivor voices in institutions. Concrete recognition reshapes our national idea of empowerment.

Question for practice:

discuss the structural supports proposed for survivors after court victories and why they are necessary for real empowerment.

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