Fewer job opportunities reason for early marriage of women in Bengal, Jharkhand: Experts
The central government study said it is clear from the findings that the benefits of government schemes are not reaching the desired section of the population.
Press Trust of India | October 22, 2022 | 12:02 PM IST
KOLKATA/RANCHI: The findings by a central government study that over half of the women get married before attaining 21 years in Jharkhand and West Bengal also revealed that the scope for sustainable job opportunities for young women is limited, experts said.
It is also clear from the findings that the benefits of government schemes are not reaching the desired section of the population, they said. However, some experts expressed doubts about the data authenticity given that the survey was conducted during the Covid pandemic.
It was found in the study, the report of which was published late last month, that Jharkhand and West Bengal are the only two states in the country where more than half of the women are married before they are 21 years old. While 54.9 per cent of girls are married in West Bengal before attaining the age of 21 years, the figure for Jharkhand is 54.6 per cent as against the national average of 29.5 per cent.
“Women, particularly in rural areas, face a lot of problems. They do not get decent sustainable employment. And then parents have only one option left – to marry them off,” said Deepika Pandey Singh, a Congress legislator, who has launched a crusade against early marriages in Jharkhand.
Also read | Higher education can help reduce child marriage by 80%; preventing practice still a distant dream
Early marriage is prevalent in all sections of Jharkhand society - tribal, Hindu, minority, educated, uneducated, rich or poor. Consistent efforts are needed to create awareness among them, Singh told PTI. She was echoed by Sukanya Sarbadhikari, Professor of Sociology at Kolkata’s Presidency University.
“Due to limited sustainable job opportunities for a young woman in rural areas, she and her parents might be looking for the option to get her married off as they can't wait for a longer period for her to become economically independent,” Sarbadhikari said. As some parts of West Bengal are contiguous with Jharkhand, the situation could be similar on this issue in those areas, she told PTI.
"It speaks volumes about the lopsided development in these states. It reveals that there must be some part of the population which is still away from the benefits of the state and central government policies," said Alok K Gupta, Associate Professor and Dean, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Central University of Jharkhand. Institutional failures at different levels of policy formulations and implementation are clear, he told PTI.
“It reveals that even after 75 years of independence, our policy interventions towards women empowerment and laws on prohibition of child marriage, enhancement of girls’ enrolment ratio at educational institutions have not delivered the way they should have done,” Prof Gupta said.
Chairperson of the West Bengal Commission for Women, Leena Gangopadhyay, said, "All that I can say is that I personally visit all the districts and my experience doesn't corroborate the findings flagged in the report.” “There can be a tendency to marry off girls early in a few cases in two-three districts but whenever that is brought to our knowledge, we take immediate action to thwart it," she said.
Projects like Kanyashree have done a lot in helping girls of West Bengal voice their views strongly, Gangopadhyay added. Kanyashree is a conditional cash transfer scheme aiming at improving the status and well-being of the girl child by incentivising schooling of teenage girls and delaying their marriages until the age of 18. It received the United Nations Public Service Award in 2019.
Also read | In over dozen states, school dropout rate at secondary level higher than national average
Prof Sarbadhikari, however, said that West Bengal's Rupashree scheme financially helps a guardian marry off the adult daughter. West Bengal Commission for Protection of Child Rights Chairperson Sudeshna Roy said if a woman above 18 years is married, that is her own independent decision as she has already become an adult. “In states like West Bengal, women are more liberated and cannot be forced to take any decision against their will," Roy claimed.
Former Jharkhand MP Salkhan Murmu, a prominent tribal leader, said there could be several reasons behind it including lack of awareness and extreme poverty. However, some of those PTI talked to on the issue wondered how the survey was done in 2020 when the country was in the grip of the Covid-19 pandemic and conducting fieldwork would have been impossible for a considerable time.
"I am not saying anything about the veracity of the report. But we are not clear about the methodology adopted in those difficult times. The government is working on a war footing to stop child marriage and marriage of young women against their wishes and we achieved considerable progress," a top source in the West Bengal government said.
The Jharkhand university professor also said that on many occasions, such statistics are misleading. "Yet, I believe that if these statistics are true, the government and society should take up the cause of women empowerment more seriously," Prof Gupta said.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- ‘Jamia Hamdard’s BMS course is industry-driven; saw 80-85% placement’: Dean, School of Management
- IIM Ahmedabad, Kozhikode, Lucknow: Top MBA colleges take the lead in school leadership training
- For IIM Ranchi, commitment to tribal issues is a ‘social responsibility’
- ‘I’ve seen students delivering food’: Expert on Canada’s study visa policies and why demand may drop 50%
- How online MBA courses at top management schools are enabling career transitions
- Happy Children’s Day 2024! Take this quiz to test how much you know of child rights and education in India
- MBA Pharmacy: How AI, data science and technology are reshaping the industry, boosting career options
- What happened to the NExT exam? Only 31% medical students know exam pattern, says study
- 100 MBBS students’ fate uncertain as HC reverses ruling on extra seats at Rajasthan private medical college
- ‘GMAT completely different from CAT; AICTE ratification making exam more popular now’: GMAC chief