A student policy forum

Nari Niti

Twelve documented implementation gaps in India's women's welfare schemes. Read the research, review the precedents, and submit a structured recommendation. Selected recommendations are compiled into a policy brief and submitted to the relevant Ministry.

12
Documented problem areas
0
Recommendations submitted
How it works
01
Read the problem
Each problem area is documented with data, evidence, and what's been tried so far.
02
Recommend a solution
Submit a structured recommendation - your proposed fix, precedents, and reasoning.
03
Shape the brief
The strongest recommendations are curated into a policy brief sent to relevant Ministries and parliamentary committees.
The Policy Brief Curated student recommendations, reviewed and sent to relevant Ministries and parliamentary standing committees.
View the brief →
Browse problem areas

Select a problem area below. Read the documented evidence, review what has been tried, and submit your recommendation. Each submission is read and considered for the policy brief.

Policy publication

The Policy Brief

Curated student recommendations on documented failures in India's women's welfare system. Reviewed and submitted to relevant Ministries and parliamentary standing committees.

Issue 1 -

Issue 1 in progress
Recommendations are being collected. The first policy brief will be published once sufficient submissions have been reviewed and curated.
About this project

Nari Niti

Nari Niti is a student policy forum focused on India's women's welfare system. Twelve documented implementation failures - drawn from government data, CAG audit reports, parliamentary committee findings, and peer-reviewed research - are presented as structured problem areas. Students read the evidence and submit formal recommendations.

The strongest recommendations are curated into a policy brief, published publicly and submitted to the relevant Ministry and parliamentary standing committees. The goal is to create a structured channel between students who think seriously about policy and the institutions that make it.

What happens to your recommendation

All submissions are reviewed. The best recommendations - judged on clarity, feasibility, evidence, and specificity to the Indian context - are included in the policy brief. If your recommendation is selected, you will be credited unless you chose to remain anonymous.

Research and accuracy

All problem area data is verified against official government guidelines, Ministry circulars, CAG reports, NFHS surveys, and parliamentary committee findings. If you notice an error, contact us through the recommendation form.