Concepts

National Commission for Women (NCW)

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectPolity

Definition

The statutory body set up to review the constitutional and legal safeguards for women, recommend remedial measures and look into individual complaints and rights violations.

Key points

  • Statutory (not constitutional) body established under the National Commission for Women Act, 1990; it became operational in 1992.
  • Composition: a Chairperson, five members and a Member-Secretary nominated by the Central Government, with members drawn from fields of relevance to women.
  • Functions include reviewing laws affecting women, inspecting jails and women's institutions, inquiring into deprivation of women's rights, and advising the Government on policy.
  • It has the powers of a civil court during inquiries but its recommendations are advisory and not binding.
  • States have parallel State Commissions for Women.

Why it matters for CAPF

The 1990 statutory basis, the advisory nature and the women's-rights mandate are standard items, with a clear social-justice and human-rights dimension that CAPF emphasises.

Common confusion

The NCW is statutory, not constitutional (unlike the SC, ST and OBC Commissions under Articles 338, 338A and 338B); its recommendations are advisory; do not confuse it with the NHRC.

One-line recall

Statutory women's-rights body (Act of 1990, operational 1992) with civil-court inquiry powers but only advisory recommendations.

Parent note

human rights and internal security

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