Abstract

The All India Women’s Conference (AIWC) played a major role in the spread of women’s education in India from 1927 to 1967. It steered the government to work for the spread of literacy and education in urban as well as rural areas, in both pre- and post-Independence India, and concerned itself largely with the benevolence of the women and children of the country. It also worked tirelessly for providing women with a voice to give vent to their feelings against all forms of discrimination. Despite a number of limitations, the AIWC, with adequate help from the Indian government, achieved much success in the spread of education among the women of India.

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