‘Deep-seated’ bias for male child persists in society: SC


UPSC Study Note: 'Deep-Seated' Bias for Male Child Persists in Society — Supreme Court Observation (June 2026)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Legislation PC&PNDT Act, 1994 (amended 2003)
Full Name Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994
Enforced from 1996 (original); amended form from 14 Feb 2003
Implementing Ministry Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW)
Nodal body Central Supervisory Board (CSB) under PC&PNDT Act
Companion scheme Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (BBBP) — launched 22 Jan 2015
BBBP implementing ministries MoWCD, MoHFW, MoE (tri-ministerial)
CSR (Census 2001) 927 females/1,000 males (0–6 yrs)
CSR (Census 2011) 914 females/1,000 males (0–6 yrs) — historic low
SRB (2016–18) 819 females/1,000 males
SRB (2021–23) 917 females/1,000 males (+98 pt improvement)
Overall sex ratio (NFHS-5, 2019–21) 1,020 females/1,000 males
SC Bench (June 2026) Justices Sanjay Karol & P.K. Mishra
BBBP district coverage All 640 districts (per Census 2011)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Economic

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The PC&PNDT Act, 1994 came into force in 1996; amended and renamed on 14 February 2003 to include pre-conception techniques. [S2]
  2. The 2003 amendment was driven by a PIL filed in 2000 and data from Census 2001 showing CSR at 927. [S2]
  3. Child Sex Ratio (0–6 years) declined from 927 (2001) to 914 (2011) — the lowest recorded value in India's post-Independence history. [S3]
  4. Sex Ratio at Birth improved by 18 points — from 819 (2016–18) to 917 (2021–23) per SRS Report 2023. [S3]
  5. NFHS-5 (2019–21) recorded overall sex ratio at 1,020 females/1,000 males — first time exceeding parity at national level. [S4]
  6. Beti Bachao Beti Padhao was launched on 22 January 2015 at Panipat, Haryana (a historically low-CSR State). [S4]
  7. BBBP is a tri-ministerial scheme under MoWCD, MoHFW, and MoE; expanded to all 640 districts of India. [S4]
  8. The Central Supervisory Board (CSB) is the apex body constituted under the PC&PNDT Act to oversee implementation. [S2]
  9. Sex ratio in India stood at 972 in 1901 — the decline to 927 by 1991 was the immediate trigger for the 1994 Act. [S2]
  10. The SC Bench in June 2026 that made the observation comprised Justices Sanjay Karol and P.K. Mishra. [S1]
  11. Penalty under PC&PNDT Act (first offence): imprisonment up to 3 years and fine up to ₹10,000. [S2]
  12. The SC characterised ongoing sex selection as evidence of "deep-seated patriarchal preferences" — language directly quotable in Mains answers. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

Parameter Detail
GS Paper GS-I (Indian Society — gender issues); GS-II (Social justice, Judiciary); GS-IV (Ethics — gender discrimination, values)
Syllabus headings GS-I: Role of women; Social empowerment. GS-II: Government policies for vulnerable sections; Judiciary. GS-IV: Probity in governance; ethical issues in society

Plausible Mains question stems:

  1. "Despite over three decades of the PC&PNDT Act, sex selection practices continue in India. Critically examine the implementation gaps and suggest reforms for more effective enforcement." (GS-II)
  2. "The persistence of son preference in India is rooted in socio-economic structures rather than mere ignorance. Discuss, with reference to recent Supreme Court observations and NFHS-5 data." (GS-I)
  3. "'Law is necessary but not sufficient to overcome entrenched patriarchy.' In light of the SC's June 2026 observation on sex selection, evaluate the multi-pronged approach India has adopted for gender-neutral demographics." (GS-IV)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Beti Bachao Beti Padhao Scheme Flagship government response to low CSR; tri-ministerial scheme directly linked to PC&PNDT enforcement
Census 2011 & NFHS-5 Data on Gender Quantitative backbone — CSR, sex ratio, maternal mortality — essential for data-based answers
Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 Dowry system is a root cause of son preference; often examined alongside PC&PNDT
MTP Act, 1971 (& 2021 Amendment) Medical Termination of Pregnancy — intersects with sex selection debate; distinguishing legal abortion from illegal sex-selective abortion is a common trap
Women's Property Rights (Hindu Succession Act amendments) Economic driver of son preference; 2005 amendment giving daughters equal coparcenary rights is a direct policy response
Judicial Activism & PIL Jurisprudence Voluntary Health Association of Punjab v. UoI — landmark PC&PNDT enforcement ruling; tests PIL's role in social reform
NCRB Data on Crimes Against Women Broader gender-justice ecosystem; foeticide/infanticide data may appear in Prelims
SDG Goal 5 (Gender Equality) India's international commitments on gender parity; links PC&PNDT enforcement to global development goals

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. PC&PNDT Act year confusion: The Act was enacted in 1994 but came into force in 1996; the amendment renaming it was in 2003 — candidates often conflate these three dates.
  2. CSR vs. SRB vs. Overall Sex Ratio: These are three distinct metrics. CSR = 0–6 years (Census); SRB = at birth (SRS data); Overall = all ages (Census/NFHS). Mixing them in answers is a common error.
  3. Implementing ministry: BBBP is tri-ministerial (MoWCD + MoHFW + MoE) — candidates often attribute it solely to MoWCD.
  4. 2011 CSR was the historic low (914), not 2001 (927). The trend was worsening between 2001 and 2011 despite the Act — this counterintuitive fact is frequently tested.
  5. MTP Act ≠ PC&PNDT Act: Candidates confuse the two. MTP regulates when abortion is legal (a reproductive right); PC&PNDT prohibits sex-selective abortion specifically. They serve different purposes and are often incorrectly swapped in answers.

11. Sources