Childhood in India is undergoing a profound transformation shaped by rapid socio-economic change, technological expansion, globalization, shifting family structures, and evolving policy frameworks. Historically viewed as a protected and sheltered life stage, childhood today has become a site of negotiation where children and caregivers constantly balance tradition, modernity, aspirations, vulnerabilities, and rights. This research paper examines the changing realities of Indian childhood through a multidimensional lens, integrating socio-cultural, economic, educational, technological, legal, and psychological perspectives. Drawing on contemporary research, policy developments, and demographic transitions, the paper argues that Indian children today experience an increasingly hybrid childhood—simultaneously empowered and vulnerable, connected and excluded, protected and at risk. While India has witnessed substantial progress in child health, education, and protection, persistent inequalities rooted in caste, class, gender, rural–urban divides, and digital access continue to shape children's everyday negotiation of rights and opportunities. The paper concludes that a grounded, rights-based and inclusive approach is essential to ensure that India’s children navigate these transformations with dignity, safety, participation and equity.
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Foziya Parveen (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b5ff8d83145bc643d1c451 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18999677
Foziya Parveen
Central Pulp & Paper Research Institute
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