The present paper is an endeavour to get in the brutal social practices against scheduled caste (SC) women in India utilizing state-level information over the period of nearly two decades, that is, 2001–2019. Besides law enforcement and punishment, there can be other compelling instruments for controlling rape against SC women. The result proposes interstate disparity in rape rate. Rape against SC women may be controlled with higher economic growth, education and expanding expenditure on police. The DEMARU states are still found slacking behind in controlling rape of SC women.
ApparayaSPatilNH (2014) Problems and challenges of scheduled caste women empowerment: a sociological study of Gulbarga District. Indian Streams Research Journal4(8): 1–5.
2.
BennettRR (1991) Development and crime: a cross-national, time-series analysis of competing models. The Sociological Quarterly32(3): 343–363.
3.
ChakrabortyCAfreenAPalD (2021) Crime against women in India: a state level analysis. Journal of International Women’s Studies22(5): 1–18.
4.
ChowdhurySSinghAKasemiN, et al. (2022) Decomposing the gap in intimate partner violence between Scheduled Caste and General category women in India: an analysis of NFHS-5 data. SSM – Population Health19: 101189.
5.
‘Crime in India’ (Various Issues 2001 to 2019). National Crime Records Bureau, Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. Available at: http://ncrb.gov.in/index.htm
6.
DasTHalderT (2018) Causes of educational backwardness of scheduled caste women students at higher education level in West Bengal. International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts6(1): 1523–1530.
7.
Data on Police Organizations in India (various issues) Ministry of Home Affairs, Bureau of Police Research & Development, Government of India.
8.
DiwakarJ (2020) Sex as a weapon to settle scores against Dalits: an quotidian phenomenon. CASTE / A Global Journal on Social Exclusion1(2): 121–134.
9.
EhrlichI (1973) Participation in illegitimate activities: a theoretical and empirical investigation. Journal of Political Economy81(3): 521–565.
10.
FajnzylberPLedermanDLoayzaN (2002) What causes violent crime?European Economic Review46(2): 1323–1357.
11.
FleisherB (1963) The effect of unemployment on Juvenile Delinquency. Journal of Political Economy71(6): 543–555.
12.
FreemanRB (1991) Crime and the Employment of Disadvantaged Youths (No. W3875). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
13.
FreemanRB (1996) Why do so many young American men commit crimes and what might we do about it?The Journal of Economic Perspectives10(1): 25–42.
14.
GanjooP (2020) Educational status of scheduled caste women in Marh area of Jammu District. Journal of Interdisciplinary Cycle Research8(5): 1217–1224.
15.
GhoshI (2019) Educational status of scheduled caste women in four eastern states of India. International Journal of Research in Social Sciences9(6): 742–755.
16.
GroggerJ (1995) The Effect of Arrest on the Employment and Earnings of Young Men. The Quarterly Journal of Economics110(1): 51–72.
17.
GroggerJ (1998) Market wages and youth crime. Journal of Labor Economics16: 756–791.
18.
Handbook of Statistics on Indian States (n.d.) Reserve Bank of India, Government of India.
19.
KateKRKumarYA (2022) An analysis of empowerment of scheduled caste women through self-help groups (SHGs) – with reference to Prakasam District of Andhra Pradesh. International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts10(4): d510–d517.
20.
KumarA (2021) Sexual violence against Dalit women: an analytical study of intersectionality of gender, caste, and class in India. Journal of International Women’s Studies22(10): 123–134.
21.
LochnerLMorettiE (2004) The effect of education on crime: evidence from prison inmates, arrests, and self-reports. The American Economic Review94(1): 155–189.
22.
MangubhaiJPIrudayamALeeJG (2005) Dalit Women Speak Out: Violence against Dalit Women in India: Preliminary Report of Study in Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Tamil Nadu/Pondicherry and Uttar Pradesh. New Delhi, India: National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights.
23.
MinchekarV (2019) Social dominance orientation and sexual violence against Dalit women in India. Think India Journal22(38): 5–12.
PaswanSJaidevP (2002) Encyclopedia of Dalits in India. Mumbai, India: Gyan Publishing House.
27.
Selected Educational Statistics (various issues) Department of Higher Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India.
28.
SharonPS (2014) Domestic violence against women in India: a family menace. Indian Journal of Applied Research4(12): 147–149.
29.
SinghDChaudharyBL (2019) Crime against women with special reference to Rajasthan. IP International Journal of Forensic Medicine and Toxicological Sciences4(4): 143–145.
30.
SinghK (2011) Dalitism and Feminism: Locating Woman in Dalit Literature. New Delhi, India: Creative Books.
31.
SureshAAmuthaD (2018) An economic analysis of empowerment of scheduled caste women in Thoothukudi District of Tamil Nadu. Journal of Social Welfare and Management10(1): 11–17.
32.
SureshaRMylarappaBC (2012) Socio-economic status of rural scheduled caste female students in higher education. Indian Journal of Education and Information Management1(8): 361–367.
33.
Thapar-BjörkertSMaioranoDBlomkvistH (2019) Empowerment mechanisms—employment guarantee, women and Dalits in India. Contemporary South Asia27(4): 486–501.
34.
UsherD (1997) Education as deterrent to crime. Canadian Journal of Economics30(2): 367–384.