Content
Startup India Fund of Funds (FoF) 2.0: Strengthening India’s Innovation Ecosystem
Delimitation & Inter-State Redistribution of Lok Sabha Seats
What are the legal consequences of piracy?
Measuring the universe
Hubble Tension: Crisis in Modern Cosmology
Labour Protests in India: Wage Stagnation, Inflation & Structural Labour Crisis
Mapping the legislative vacuum in India’s heat crisis
Sudan war: Sexual violence against women ‘quadruples’ in three years, says UN Women
Startup India Fund of Funds (FoF) 2.0: Strengthening India’s Innovation Ecosystem
Why in News?
On 13 April 2026, Government notified Startup India Fund of Funds 2.0 (FoF 2.0) with ₹10,000 crore corpus to mobilize capital for startups.
Issue in Brief
FoF 2.0 aims to address persistent funding gaps, especially in deep-tech, early-stage, and manufacturing startups, by catalysing domestic venture capital ecosystem.
Relevance
GS Paper III: Economy (Startups, Venture Capital, Industrial Policy), Science & Technology (Innovation ecosystem)
GS Paper II: Governance (Institutional mechanisms, Ease of Doing Business)
Practice Question
“Startup India Fund of Funds 2.0 seeks to address critical funding gaps in India’s startup ecosystem. Examine its significance, challenges, and role in promoting innovation-driven growth.” (250 words)
Static Background
Startup India Initiative (2016) launched to promote entrepreneurship, innovation, and ease of doing business.
Fund of Funds model:
Government does not invest directly in startups
Invests via SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs)
Small Industries Development Bank of India acts as implementation agency.
Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs):
Privately pooled investment vehicles regulated by Securities and Exchange Board of India
Key Features of FoF 2.0
Total corpus:
₹10,000 crore allocated across 16th and 17th Finance Commission cycles
Investment focus areas:
Deep-tech (AI, semiconductors, quantum, etc.)
Early growth-stage startups
Innovative manufacturing and technology-driven sectors
Structured governance:
Venture Capital Investment Committee (VCIC) for AIF selection
Empowered Committee (EC) for monitoring and oversight
Includes co-investment mechanisms with institutional investors under regulated framework.
Performance Linkage (FoF 1.0 Context)
Builds on Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS 1.0, 2016) which:
Catalysed domestic VC ecosystem
Addressed early-stage funding gaps
FoF 2.0 reflects shift towards scale, innovation depth, and strategic sectors.
Dimension
Economic Dimension
Enhances availability of risk capital, especially where private VC participation is limited.
Promotes job creation, entrepreneurship, and capital formation, contributing to GDP growth.
Innovation & Technology Dimension
Focus on deep-tech sectors supports strategic capabilities in:
AI, quantum computing, advanced manufacturing
Reduces dependence on foreign technology and capital ecosystems.
Industrial Policy Dimension
Supports Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat by funding innovation-led manufacturing startups.
Encourages transition from service-led to product-based innovation economy.
Financial Ecosystem Dimension
Strengthens domestic venture capital and private equity ecosystem through AIFs.
Reduces over-reliance on foreign venture capital flows, improving financial resilience.
Governance Dimension
Multi-layered structure (VCIC + EC) ensures:
Professional selection of funds
Monitoring and accountability mechanisms
Implementation through SIDBI ensures institutional continuity.
Social Dimension
Promotes inclusive entrepreneurship, potentially benefiting startups in Tier-2/3 cities.
Supports high-quality employment generation, especially in technology-driven sectors.
Key Challenges
Risk of capital concentration in established startups, limiting support for truly early-stage ventures.
Dependence on AIF performance may lead to uneven distribution of funds across sectors and regions.
Limited exit opportunities (IPO/M&A) in India affecting investor returns.
Regulatory complexity in AIF operations and compliance.
Way Forward
Ensure balanced allocation across early-stage, growth-stage, and deep-tech startups.
Strengthen startup exit ecosystem through reforms in IPO markets and M&A regulations.
Promote regional diversification of AIF investments, including Tier-2/3 ecosystems.
Enhance synergy with initiatives like Digital India, Make in India, and National Deep Tech Mission.
Improve regulatory clarity and ease for AIF participation and cross-border investments.
Delimitation & Inter-State Redistribution of Lok Sabha Seats
Why in News?
The Centre circulated draft Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill and Delimitation Bill proposing seat redistribution based on 2011 Census and expansion of Lok Sabha.
Issue in Brief
Proposed reforms aim to increase Lok Sabha strength to 850 seats and enable inter-State redistribution, raising concerns on federal balance, representation, and demographic equity.
Relevance
GS Paper II: Constitution, Federalism, Representation, Parliament
GS Paper I: Population dynamics, Regional disparities
Practice Question
“Proposed delimitation and inter-state redistribution of Lok Sabha seats raises questions of equity and federal balance. Critically analyse.” (250 words)
Static Background
Article 81: Allocation of Lok Sabha seats among States based on population.
Article 82: Delimitation after every Census through Delimitation Commission.
42nd Amendment Act, 1976: Froze seat allocation based on 1971 Census to promote population control.
84th Amendment Act, 2001: Extended freeze till first Census after 2026.
Current system:
Inter-State allocation → 1971 Census
Intra-State delimitation → 2001 Census
Key Provisions of Proposed Bills
Increase Lok Sabha strength:
From 550 → up to 850 seats (815 States + 35 UTs)
Enable redistribution based on latest Census (2011) instead of 1971 baseline.
Integrate 33% reservation for women (linked to delimitation process).
Mandate Delimitation Commission to readjust seat allocation across States.
Data-Based Impact
Hindi heartland States:
Share increases from 38.1% → 43.1%
Southern States:
Share declines from 24.3% → 20.7%
Reflects population-proportional representation shift, benefiting high population growth States.
Dimensions
Constitutional / Legal Dimension
Aligns with principle of “one person, one vote” (population-based representation) under Article 81.
However, removal/modification of seat freeze weakens policy incentive for population stabilisation.
Federalism Dimension
Redistribution may alter political weight of States in Union legislature, impacting cooperative federalism.
Southern States argue demographic performance (lower fertility) may lead to reduced representation.
Governance / Administrative Dimension
Larger Lok Sabha (850 members) raises concerns regarding:
Efficiency of parliamentary functioning
Debate quality and legislative productivity
Delimitation exercise is complex, requiring time, data accuracy, and political consensus.
Political Economy Dimension
Seat redistribution could influence:
Electoral strategies and coalition politics
Resource allocation and policy priorities at Union level
Potential shift in regional political influence.
Social Dimension
Raises debate on fairness between:
Population-based representation vs development-based equity
States with successful population control policies may perceive relative disadvantage.
Ethical Dimension
Balancing:
Democratic equality (equal representation)
Inter-generational fairness (rewarding responsible population policies)
Key Challenges
Lack of national consensus on delimitation timing and methodology.
Linking women’s reservation with delimitation may delay implementation of gender representation.
Potential for regional political tensions and perception of inequity.
Administrative complexity in redrawing constituencies across diverse geographies.
Way Forward
Build broad political consensus through Inter-State consultations and parliamentary debate.
Consider balanced formula combining population with indicators like development or demographic performance.
Decouple women’s reservation implementation from delimitation delays for immediate effect.
Ensure transparency and independence of Delimitation Commission to maintain trust.
Strengthen parliamentary processes to handle expanded House size efficiently.
What are the legal consequences of piracy?
Why in News?
Tamil film Jana Nayagan was leaked online before theatrical release, triggering enforcement under amended Cinematograph Act, 1952 and piracy laws.
Issue in Brief
Pre-release piracy represents a severe breach of intellectual property rights (IPR), causing significant financial loss and exposing gaps in enforcement and digital content protection systems.
Relevance
GS Paper II: Governance, Intellectual Property Rights
GS Paper III: Technology, Cybersecurity, Digital economy
Practice Question
“Despite strong legal provisions, piracy remains widespread in India. Analyse the legal, technological, and governance challenges in curbing digital piracy.” (250 words)
Static Background
Copyright Act, 1957 governs protection of creative works including films, music, and literature.
Section 63 and 63A:
Punishment up to 3 years imprisonment and ₹2 lakh fine for copyright infringement.
Cinematograph Amendment Act, 2023 introduced stricter anti-piracy provisions:
Fine up to 5% of audited gross production cost — key factual trap.
Digital Rights Management (DRM) refers to technologies used to prevent unauthorised copying of digital content.
Key Features of the Current Case
Leak occurred before theatrical release, unlike typical piracy which happens post-OTT release, increasing severity of financial and legal implications.
Indicates breach within trusted distribution chain, suggesting insider leak rather than external hacking.
Authorities have arrested six individuals, including those sharing cloud storage links, showing expanded liability beyond original uploader.
Dimensions
Legal Dimension
India has strong statutory framework, combining Copyright Act penalties and Cinematograph Act financial sanctions for piracy deterrence.
Courts also issue:
John Doe orders (pre-emptive injunctions)
Dynamic injunctions (blocking evolving piracy links)
However, enforcement remains inconsistent, limiting deterrence effect.
Governance and Enforcement Dimension
India is often labelled a “notorious market” for piracy due to weak enforcement and low conviction rates.
Investigation challenges include:
Anonymous digital networks
Cross-border hosting of pirated content
Focus often remains on distributors rather than individual infringers, reducing accountability.
Technological Dimension
Piracy thrives due to:
Ability to bypass DRM protections
Distribution via torrent networks, Telegram groups, cloud storage links
Studios use:
Encryption of theatrical prints
Forensic watermarking (visible/invisible) to trace leaks
However, complete prevention remains technologically difficult.
Economic Dimension
Pre-release leaks damage:
Box office revenues
OTT and satellite rights valuation
Film industry faces substantial losses, affecting investment, employment, and creative ecosystem sustainability.
Institutional Dimension
Rise of anti-piracy firms sending takedown notices to platforms shows increasing reliance on private enforcement mechanisms.
Platforms often comply quickly, but constant domain switching by piracy sites limits long-term effectiveness.
Ethical Dimension
Piracy raises concerns of fair compensation for creative labour, impacting artists, technicians, and producers across the value chain.
Reflects tension between digital accessibility and protection of intellectual property rights.
Key Challenges
Difficulty in completely removing pirated content due to decentralised distribution networks (torrent, encrypted messaging platforms).
Weak enforcement and delayed legal action reduce deterrence against piracy networks.
Insider leaks within supply chain undermine content security frameworks.
Rapid technological evolution outpacing legal and regulatory responses.
Way Forward
Strengthen cybercrime investigation capacity, including digital forensics and international cooperation for cross-border piracy networks.
Enhance enforcement of Cinematograph Amendment Act, 2023, ensuring strict penalties in high-impact cases.
Promote adoption of advanced DRM technologies and blockchain-based content tracking systems.
Increase awareness among users regarding legal consequences of sharing pirated content.
Encourage collaboration between government, industry, and digital platforms for coordinated anti-piracy strategy.
Hubble Tension: Crisis in Modern Cosmology
Why in News?
On 10 April 2026, astronomers refined the local expansion rate to 73.5 km/s/Mpc, reinforcing the persistent discrepancy known as the Hubble tension.
Issue in Brief
Two highly precise methods measuring the rate of expansion of the universe (Hubble constant) produce conflicting results, challenging the standard cosmological model.
Relevance
GS Paper III: Science & Technology (Space science, Cosmology)
Practice Question
“The ‘Hubble tension’ represents a major challenge to the standard cosmological model. Explain its causes and implications for modern physics.” (250 words)
Static Background
Hubble constant (H₀) measures the rate at which the universe expands, expressed as km/s per megaparsec (Mpc) — key unit frequently asked in prelims.
1 megaparsec (Mpc) ≈ 3.26 million light years, used as standard astronomical distance unit in cosmology.
Expansion of universe was first discovered by Edwin Hubble in 1929 through redshift observations.
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) refers to relic radiation from Big Bang (~380,000 years after origin of universe) — crucial conceptual trap.
Two Competing Measurement Methods
Local (Late Universe) Method
Uses cosmic distance ladder, involving:
Cepheid variable stars (standard candles)
Type Ia supernovae (standardisable candles)
Measures present-day expansion directly from nearby galaxies.
Gives higher value:
~73–73.5 km/s/Mpc (confirmed on 10 April 2026)
Early Universe Method
Uses Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) data from missions like Planck Mission.
Applies cosmological models (ΛCDM) to project early universe conditions to present expansion rate.
Gives lower value:
~67 km/s/Mpc
Nature of the Tension
The gap between ~73 and ~67 km/s/Mpc is statistically significant and persists despite improvements in measurement precision.
Both methods are independently robust, suggesting issue is not random error but systematic or theoretical limitation.
Dimensions
Scientific Dimension
Challenges the validity of ΛCDM model (Lambda Cold Dark Matter), which is the current standard model of cosmology.
Indicates potential gaps in understanding of dark energy, dark matter, or early universe physics.
Technological Dimension
Precision measurements rely on advanced telescopes like:
Hubble Space Telescope
James Webb Space Telescope
Improved observational accuracy has strengthened both conflicting results rather than resolving discrepancy.
Theoretical Physics Dimension
Possibility of “new physics” beyond Standard Model, such as:
Dynamic dark energy
New relativistic particles
Modified gravity theories
Could fundamentally alter understanding of universe evolution and fate.
Epistemological Dimension
Demonstrates how scientific progress occurs through anomalies and paradigm shifts, similar to Kuhn’s theory of scientific revolutions.
Highlights limits of current models despite high-precision data.
Key Challenges
Difficulty in identifying whether discrepancy arises from measurement errors or fundamental theoretical flaws.
Dependence on cosmological models introduces model-based uncertainties in early universe method.
Increasing precision has widened confidence in both sides rather than resolving disagreement.
Way Forward
Strengthen cybercrime investigation capacity, including digital forensics and international cooperation for cross-border piracy networks.
Enhance enforcement of Cinematograph Amendment Act, 2023, ensuring strict penalties in high-impact cases.
Promote adoption of advanced DRM technologies and blockchain-based content tracking systems.
Increase awareness among users regarding legal consequences of sharing pirated content.
Encourage collaboration between government, industry, and digital platforms for coordinated anti-piracy strategy.
Labour Protests in India: Wage Stagnation, Inflation & Structural Labour Crisis
Why in News?
On 8 April 2026, factory workers in Noida began protests demanding wage hikes, which escalated into violence on 14 April 2026, highlighting structural labour distress.
Issue in Brief
Labour unrest reflects widening gap between rising cost of living (inflation-driven) and stagnant real wages, compounded by delays in wage revision and ambiguity in labour law implementation.
Relevance
GS Paper III: Economy (Labour markets, Employment, Informality)
GS Paper II: Governance (Labour laws, Social protection)
Practice Question
“Rising labour unrest in India reflects deeper structural issues in wage growth, informality, and labour governance. Analyse.” (250 words)
Static Background
Minimum wage comprises:
Base wage (revised every 5 years)
Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) linked to Consumer Price Index–Industrial Workers (CPI-IW, base year 2016), revised twice annually.
Four Labour Codes notified on 21 November 2025 aim to streamline labour laws:
Code on Wages
Industrial Relations Code
Social Security Code
OSHWC Code
Labour Codes define 8-hour workday and 48-hour weekly limit, aligning with International Labour Organization norms, but operational rules remain largely unnotified.
Key Data and Evidence
CPI-IW inflation rose 24.8% (Feb 2021–Feb 2026) nationally, with ~27.4% in Delhi-NCR, significantly increasing cost of living for industrial workers.
Haryana minimum wage rose from ₹9,803 (July 2021) to ₹13,274 (July 2025) before revision, lagging inflation-adjusted income requirements.
Uttar Pradesh wages increased ~24.8% (2021–2026), matching inflation, implying no real wage growth and stagnant purchasing power.
Migrant workers face extreme costs, including LPG cylinders up to ₹4,000 (informal markets), alongside rising rents and food prices.
Dimensions
Economic Dimension
Wage growth lagging inflation leads to erosion of real wages, reducing consumption capacity and weakening aggregate demand in labour-intensive manufacturing sectors.
External shocks such as West Asia conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruptions increase input costs, affecting industrial profitability and wage payments.
Labour Market Dimension
Informal and migrant workers dominate workforce, lacking formal contracts, social security, and bargaining power, making them highly vulnerable to inflationary shocks and wage delays.
Absence of strong enforcement mechanisms results in overtime violations, delayed payments, and contract exploitation.
Governance and Legal Dimension
Base wage revisions delayed beyond mandatory 5-year cycle, indicating administrative inertia and weak compliance with statutory labour provisions.
Labour Codes shift regulatory power to executive rule-making, reducing legislative oversight and increasing ambiguity in implementation.
Institutional Dimension
Lack of formal recognition of trade unions and collective bargaining frameworks weakens workers’ negotiating capacity in industrial disputes.
Flexibility in working hours (e.g., 12-hour shifts for 4 days) risks overwork under guise of labour flexibility.
Social Dimension
Migrant workers face multiple vulnerabilities including high living costs, lack of affordable housing, and limited access to welfare schemes, intensifying urban distress.
Wage stagnation increases income inequality and precarity, particularly in industrial clusters like NCR.
Ethical Dimension
Failure to ensure fair wages amid rising costs violates principles of economic justice, dignity of labour, and Directive Principles (Articles 39, 43).
Raises ethical concerns of exploitation in growth-centric industrialisation models.
Key Challenges
Persistent mismatch between inflation and wage growth, leading to declining real incomes.
Delay in final notification and implementation of Labour Code rules, creating regulatory uncertainty.
Weak grievance redressal and absence of effective collective bargaining mechanisms.
Rising cost-of-living pressures without adequate social protection for workers.
Increasing vulnerability of migrant labour in urban-industrial ecosystems.
Way Forward
Ensure time-bound revision of base wages, strictly adhering to 5-year cycle with inflation-adjusted benchmarks.
Strengthen automatic linkage of wages to CPI-IW, ensuring real wage protection.
Expedite notification and uniform implementation of Labour Code rules across states.
Reinforce trade union rights and institutionalise collective bargaining frameworks.
Expand social protection coverage through portable benefits for migrant workers.
Improve labour governance via digital wage monitoring and compliance enforcement systems.
Mapping the legislative vacuum in India’s heat crisis
Why in News?
Recent evidence (2025–2026) shows heatwaves expanding geographically and intensifying, with 57% of Indian districts classified as heat-prone, disproportionately impacting informal workers and vulnerable populations.
Issue in Brief
Heatwaves have evolved from seasonal climatic events into a systemic socio-economic and public health crisis, exposing deep inequalities in access to cooling, safety, and livelihood protection.
Relevance
GS Paper III: Environment, Disaster Management, Climate change
GS Paper II: Governance (Public health, labour protection)
Practice Question
“Heatwaves in India are evolving into a socio-economic crisis, yet the legal framework remains inadequate. Examine the governance gaps and suggest measures.” (250 words)
Static Background
Heatwave in India is defined by India Meteorological Department based on temperature thresholds (≥40°C plains, ≥37°C coastal) and deviation from normal conditions.
Heat Index (temperature + humidity) better reflects human discomfort and mortality risk, especially in coastal regions, but is not yet primary legal trigger.
Heatwaves are not currently included in India’s Notified Disaster list, limiting access to National Disaster Response Fund (NDRF) — key policy gap.
Key Data and Evidence
Over 57% districts heat-prone, indicating nationwide spread beyond traditional northwest and central India heat belts.
Around 400–490 million informal workers lack access to cooling infrastructure, facing direct exposure to extreme heat conditions.
Micro-climate effects (e.g., waste sites) increase local temperatures by ~5% higher than surrounding areas, intensifying occupational hazards.
Dimensions
Environmental Dimension
Climate change has increased frequency, duration, and spatial spread of heatwaves, including penetration into humid and coastal regions.
Urban heat island effect exacerbates temperature rise in cities due to concrete infrastructure, reduced vegetation, and waste accumulation.
Economic Dimension
Heat stress reduces labour productivity significantly, especially in construction, agriculture, and informal sectors, causing income loss and economic inefficiency.
Informal workers face “work vs survival trade-off”, where resting reduces income while working risks severe health consequences.
Social Dimension (Thermal Inequality)
Heat impact is stratified by class, caste, and gender, creating “thermal injustice” where vulnerable groups lack access to cooling and protection.
Marginalised occupations (sanitation workers, waste pickers) face compound exposure from heat and toxic environments, reinforcing caste-based vulnerabilities.
Labour and Governance Dimension
Existing legal framework:
Factories Act, 1948 → limited to indoor workspaces
OSHWC Code, 2020 → does not mandate outdoor heat safety standards
Section 23 allows government action but lacks binding obligations, creating regulatory vacuum for worker protection.
Public Health Dimension
Heat exposure leads to heatstroke, dehydration, cardiovascular stress, and occupational injuries, disproportionately affecting outdoor workers.
Lack of cooling infrastructure and rest protocols increases mortality and morbidity risks during extreme heat events.
Technology and Platform Economy Dimension
Gig workers face algorithmic pressure (delivery deadlines, penalties), discouraging rest even during extreme heat alerts.
Absence of legal classification as “workers” excludes them from labour protections and occupational safety frameworks.
Ethical Dimension
Heat exposure for vulnerable workers represents violation of Article 21 (Right to Life), as survival becomes contingent on unsafe labour conditions.
Raises ethical concern of climate injustice, where those least responsible for emissions suffer maximum impact.
Key Challenges
Absence of heatwaves in Notified Disaster list, restricting funding and coordinated response mechanisms.
Weak labour protections for informal and gig workers, who constitute majority of workforce.
Lack of legally enforceable heat safety standards and work-rest cycles.
Inadequate urban planning leading to heat islands and poor cooling infrastructure.
Data and policy gap in adopting Heat Index-based thresholds for accurate risk assessment.
Way Forward
Include heatwaves in Notified Disaster list (2026–31 Finance Commission recommendation) to unlock NDRF funding and strengthen response capacity.
Adopt Heat Index as legal trigger for declaring heat alerts, ensuring better protection in humid and coastal regions.
Notify binding rules under OSHWC Code Section 23, mandating work-rest cycles, hydration access, and protective equipment.
Recognise “Right to Cool” under Article 21, ensuring access to cooling shelters, water kiosks, and public infrastructure.
Regulate gig platforms to suspend penalties during extreme heat alerts, ensuring worker safety.
Promote parametric heat insurance models (e.g., SEWA) to compensate income losses during extreme weather conditions.
Strengthen urban planning through green cover expansion, reflective materials, and heat-resilient infrastructure.
Sudan war: Sexual violence against women ‘quadruples’ in three years, says UN Women
Why in News?
On 14 April 2026, UN Women reported that conflict-related sexual violence in Sudan has quadrupled since April 2023, signalling systematic weaponisation of gender-based violence.
Issue in Brief
The ongoing conflict in Sudan has normalised sexual violence as a deliberate war strategy, alongside mass displacement and humanitarian collapse, raising serious international legal and ethical concerns.
Relevance
GS Paper II: International Relations, Global governance
GS Paper IV: Ethics (Human rights, gender justice)
Practice Question
“Sexual violence in conflict zones represents a grave violation of international humanitarian law. Analyse the Sudan crisis in this context.” (250 words)
Static Background
Sudan conflict began in April 2023 between Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF), making it a non-international armed conflict under international humanitarian law.
Sexual violence in conflict is legally classified as both a “war crime” and “crime against humanity” under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) — important Prelims distinction.
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (2000) focuses on Women, Peace and Security (WPS), mandating women’s participation in peacebuilding and protection during conflicts.
Under Geneva Conventions (1949), protection of civilians, including women, is mandatory; violations such as rape constitute grave breaches of humanitarian law.
Key Data and Evidence
Number of survivors needing support has quadrupled since 2023, indicating systematic escalation rather than isolated incidents of violence.
Over 4.3 million women and girls internally displaced, increasing vulnerability to trafficking, exploitation, and sexual abuse.
Around 17.1 million people require humanitarian assistance in 2026, reflecting near-collapse of state capacity and service delivery systems.
Two-thirds frontline responders reported increased sexual violence in 2025, with further escalation reported in 2026, confirming sustained conflict intensity.
Dimensions
International Relations Dimension
Sudan crisis exposes limitations of UN-led multilateral conflict resolution, especially in internal conflicts where sovereignty constraints limit external intervention.
Demonstrates weakening of rules-based international order, where enforcement of humanitarian norms remains inconsistent and selective.
Security Dimension
Sexual violence is used as a tactical weapon to terrorise populations, displace communities, and assert territorial control, making it part of military strategy rather than collateral damage.
Such violence contributes to long-term instability by destroying social fabric and creating intergenerational trauma, complicating post-conflict recovery.
Social and Gender Dimension
Women and girls face disproportionate impact, including sexual violence, forced displacement, loss of livelihoods, and exclusion from decision-making processes.
Exclusion of women from peace negotiations violates UNSCR 1325 principles, weakening prospects of inclusive and sustainable peace agreements.
Humanitarian Dimension
Collapse of basic services like food supply, healthcare, and shelter has created extreme vulnerability, especially for displaced women and children.
Blockades and insecurity severely restrict humanitarian access, undermining effectiveness of global aid mechanisms.
Governance and Legal Dimension
Widespread impunity reflects failure of international accountability mechanisms like ICC enforcement, due to political constraints and lack of cooperation from state actors.
Weak domestic institutions further aggravate inability to investigate, prosecute, and prevent gender-based crimes.
Ethical Dimension
Use of sexual violence as a weapon represents complete breakdown of moral norms in warfare, violating principles of dignity, autonomy, and human rights.
Raises ethical responsibility of international community to act against systematic and targeted violence against civilians.
Role of Women-led Organisations
Women-led organisations have reached ~20 million people, providing essential services including food aid, healthcare, and psychosocial support in conflict zones.
99% report operational challenges, including insecurity, funding shortages, and administrative restrictions, limiting their ability to scale interventions.
Around 1 in 5 frontline women workers face threats, highlighting risks faced by local peacebuilders and humanitarian actors.
Challenges
Weak enforcement of international humanitarian law, allowing perpetrators to operate with near-complete impunity.
Continued exclusion of women from formal peace processes, undermining inclusive governance and durable conflict resolution.
Severe funding constraints affecting gender-focused humanitarian interventions and local organisations.
Persistent insecurity limiting aid delivery, monitoring, and civilian protection mechanisms.
Normalisation of sexual violence as a conflict tactic, setting dangerous global precedents.
Way Forward
Strengthen enforcement of Rome Statute provisions through ICC and international cooperation, ensuring accountability for sexual violence as war crime.
Institutionalise women’s participation in peace processes, in line with UNSC Resolution 1325 and subsequent WPS resolutions.
Increase funding and protection for women-led grassroots organisations, which play critical role in last-mile humanitarian delivery.
Enhance international diplomatic engagement and ceasefire negotiations, prioritising civilian protection mechanisms.
Develop early warning and monitoring systems for conflict-related sexual violence, integrating them into UN peacekeeping mandates.