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Parliamentary Panel Flags Gaps in Juvenile Justice Implementation

Committee highlights lack of rehabilitation infrastructure and shortage of trained child welfare personnel, urging stronger institutional capacity and child-centric reforms

Deeksha Upadhyay 05 February 2026 13:55

Parliamentary Panel Flags Gaps in Juvenile Justice Implementation

A Parliamentary Standing Committee has raised serious concerns over the implementation of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, pointing to persistent gaps between legislative intent and ground-level execution. The Act aims to ensure care, protection, rehabilitation and social reintegration of children in conflict with law and children in need of care and protection.

Key Findings of the Committee

The Committee observed that many states lack adequate rehabilitation and correctional infrastructure, including functional observation homes, special homes and aftercare facilities. In several districts, existing institutions are overcrowded, poorly maintained and fail to meet prescribed standards.
Another major concern highlighted was the shortage of trained child welfare officers and probation officers, which hampers timely inquiry, counselling and rehabilitation of juveniles. The Committee also noted delays in case disposal due to understaffed Juvenile Justice Boards and Child Welfare Committees.

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Governance and Implementation Challenges

The report flagged weak coordination between state governments, district administrations and child protection agencies. Inadequate funding, limited capacity building, and lack of regular monitoring were identified as key reasons for uneven implementation of the Act across states. The Committee stressed that a punitive approach defeats the rehabilitative spirit of juvenile justice.

Significance of the Findings

The observations underscore the need for child-centric reforms, focusing on rehabilitation rather than punishment. Strengthening institutional capacity, improving training of child welfare personnel and ensuring uniform standards across states are critical to safeguarding children’s rights and dignity.

Way Forward

The Committee recommended enhanced budgetary support, regular audits of juvenile care institutions and mandatory training programmes to ensure effective and humane implementation of the Juvenile Justice framework.

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