Abstract
Indian Journal of Modern Research and Reviews, 2026; 4(3): 296-308
Interrelationship of Political Participation, Educational and Health Problems of Child Labour in The Unorganized Sector in the Overall Empowerment of Rural Women: A Sociological Study
Author Name: Dr. Nitu Tak
Abstract
<p>In rural India, especially those places far from cities, women getting into politics connects in weird ways to kids ending up in child labour jobs that mess with their schooling and health. It’s not just separate issues, like one for women and another for kids working informally. They all tie back to how families struggle, and I think that could really help empower women if people looked at it right. But honestly, not a lot of research puts it all together like that yet.Policies tend to handle things one at a time, womens rights in one area, child labor laws somewhere else, and the unorganized sector as its own problem. Sociology hasnt quite sorted out those links, or at least from what Ive seen. This paper tries to look at how rural women having little voice in politics leads to kids skipping school and getting into dangerous work in informal spots. That whole cycle affects their health too, and it keeps families stuck in poverty.I pulled from secondary stuff, national surveys, some government reports, and reports from international organizations. The way I framed it mixes the capability approach with feminist views on political stuff and ideas about the informal economy. Seems like when women arent participating much politically, they have a harder time speaking up at home or in the community. That lets child labor keep happening, indirectly.Kids dropping out for those jobs, getting hurt or sick from it, that just makes everything worse for the family. Limits what women can achieve socially, or even decide for themselves. Empowerment isnt only voting or getting a job, its more this bigger picture with home dynamics and those inequalities in the unorganized work world. It feels interconnected in a way thats hard to ignore.The findings point to this multidimensional setup, linked to labor inside households too. For policies, maybe something integrated would work better, combining womens political involvement with kid protection, health support, and improving rural schools. Some connections here get messy; I am not totally sure how to tie them all neatly. But it suggests we need different approaches overall.</p>
<p> </p>
Keywords
rural women, political participation, child labour, unorganized sector, educational deprivation, health vulnerability, empowerment, informal economy, India.
