Abstract

PurposeThis paper investigates the deterrence effect of development on crime against women in India. Specifically, the authors examine the deterrence effect of the composite development index, i.e. Human Development Index (HDI), along with other variables acting as development indicators such as women’s employment, the relative strength of women in the police force, urbanization, etc., on crimes against women.Design/methodology/approachThis study adopts a fixed effect within-group (WG) panel regression model and pooled regression model on the data of 28 states over 20 years from 2000 to 2019. For checking the robustness of the results, the authors use the estimation from the system generalized method of moments.FindingsThe results confirm the deterrence effect of development as measured by the HDI and female labor force participation on various crimes against women. In addition, female feticide representing the socio-cultural attitude toward women turned out to be another significant determinant of almost all types of crime against women. Further, the study also finds the deterrence effect of variables such as police expenditure, the relative strength of women in the police force, urbanization and arrest rate on various crimes against women.Originality/valueThis research paper is unique because it tries to examine the deterrence hypothesis of development by taking a composite index of development, i.e. HDI and other variables at the state level in the Indian union.

Highlights

  • The rising crimes against women, especially against minors and young girls and women in various parts of India, have become the biggest challenge for the state

  • The empirical analysis is based on the rate of crime which is defined as the number of crimes per million population that has occurred in a given geographical region [8]

  • All variables except Human Development Index (HDI) and the urban ratio of population are stationary at level (Appendix Table A2)

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Summary

Introduction

The rising crimes against women, especially against minors and young girls and women in various parts of India, have become the biggest challenge for the state. This presents a clear picture of how women and young girls are treated in Indian society. Published in Journal of Business and Socio-economic Development. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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