Abstract:
In the contemporary world of rapid urbanisation, urban slums emerge as a new social
dynamic system with a plethora of law and order challenges. Adolescent girls in urban
slums are one of the most vulnerable sections of the society subject to an array of safety
and security concerns. Through the literature review it has been found that the western
theories of abuse does not hold ground in the Indian context and this research attempted
to study the safety and security concerns of adolescent girls in urban slums in a micro
context within the Rajendranagar slum of Bangalore and strengthen the base for a
theoretical framework within the Indian context. The qualitative nature of the research
along with the sensitive nature of data required the method of snowball sampling.
Rajendranagar Slum was a Pandora’s Box of human rights violations and the state
of the adolescent girls were truly disheartening. One of the important findings of the
study was the existence of a tendency among the people in the slum to move to the
exteriors of the slum from the interior regions. . The people resorted mostly resorted to
the instrument of marriage where the girls from the interiors of the slum would be
married off to the men from the exterior regions. There was a silent hierarchy that
existed within the layers of slum with the dignity and quality of life decreasing deeper
into the interiors of the slum.
This research follows the basic assumption that security is the sanctuary from
intentional threats while safety is a more relative term and is understood as the control
of identified threats to secure a permissible amount of risk (Sehwal 2016). Problematic
Menstrual Hygiene Management (MHM), Physical and sexual abuse and child
marriage were the major threats identified and Sexual abuse of adolescent girls was
found to be the most rampant and serious violation that is studied in detail.
The study has formulated a Multifactorial theory of Abuse which is based on
Maslow’s theory of motivation. The theory helps to explain the peculiarity of abuse in
the urban slum context and highlights the need for a specific policy framework to
address the issue. The study then compares case studies of a married and unmarried
adolescent girl in the slum to prove that child marriage is not a safety valve to prevent
child abuse and it is only contortion of the form of abuse.