info@aowbjsws.org +91 6291 294811

Our organization consists of Officers from different directorates i,e Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) Scheme, Social Welfare and Child Rights and Trafficking under The Department of Women and Child Development and Social Welfare.

The Department of Women and Child Development and Social Welfare has the following Offices: Directorate of ICDS, Directorate of Social Welfare, West Bengal Social Welfare Board, Office of the Controller for Vagrancy, Office of Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities, West Bengal Commission for Women, West Bengal Women Development Undertaking and the Transgender Development Board.

WBJSWSA

Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) Scheme ICDS Scheme represents one of the world’s largest and most unique programmes for early childhood development. ICDS is the foremost symbol of India’s commitment to her children – India’s response to the challenge of providing pre-school education on one hand and breaking the vicious cycle of malnutrition, morbidity, reduced learning capacity and mortality.
Directorate of Social Welfare is working in the field of protection and welfare of Senior Citizens, Women, Persons with Disabilities, Victim of Drug & Abuse and other marginalized sections of the society through Social Legislations and schemes. The target group of this Directorate are most marginalized and vulnerable section of society including the women and old persons.

In this connection this Directorate implements & monitors following schemes, like :

⯁ One Stop Centre(OSC) and Shakti Sadan of Mission Shakti umbrella scheme under Ministry of Women & Child Development, Govt. of India along with State budget. The funding pattern of Samarthya of Mission Shakti is implemented with a funding ratio of 60:40 between Centre and State Govt for Shakti Sadan ( Swadhar Greh and Ujjawala home)
⯁ IPSrC (Integrated programme for Senior Citizen), DDRS (Deen Dayal Rehabilitation Scheme), DDRC (District Disability Rehabilitation centre), ADIP (Assistance to Disabled Persons for Purchase/Fitting of Aids and Appliances), Schemes related to Drug Demand Reduction under Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment of GoI.

The Funding pattern for all the AVYAY, NAPDDR, DDRC, ADIP is 100% by the GOI. The same for DDRS is 90% by the GOI & 10% by the Implementing Agencies except for projects located in Special Areas as mentioned in the Guideline of the Scheme where 100% fund will be provided by GOI.

⯁ Two Half-way Homes for rehabilitation of persons cured from mental illness and an old-age Home APANJAN are run under direct supervision of this Directorate which are fully funded by the State Government.
⯁ Regular rehabilitation/restoration of the residents of Swadhar, Ujjawala.Half-Way-Home and OSC to their family/ state/ society.
⯁ The Senior Citizens are admitted to different Govt. run Old Age Homes under supervision of this Directorate.
⯁ This Directorate is also entrusted with the implementation of Social Legislation, e.g. Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizen Act, 2007, Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956, Dowry Prohibition Act, 1986, Women & Children Institution (Licensing) Act, 1956 etc.

The Department of Women Development and Social Welfare works towards the protection, equity and inclusion of populations that have been historically oppressed, neglected or excluded from development because of their gender, age, disability or situation. This includes women, senior citizens and other marginalized populations such as persons with disabilities, transgender persons, homeless persons and persons with drug / alcohol addiction.
The Department’s work has evolved along with the evolution of women’s rights. With a strong foundation laid by women specific laws, policies and schemes at the national and state level, the department is concentrating its energies on a critical demographic sector – adolescent girls.
The Department of Women Development and Social Welfare
The Department of Women Development and Social Welfare works towards the protection, equity and inclusion of populations that have been historically oppressed, neglected or excluded from development because of their gender, age, disability or situation. This includes women, senior citizens and other marginalized populations such as persons with disabilities, transgender persons, homeless persons and persons with drug / alcohol addiction.
The Department of Women Development and Social Welfare has the following offices: Directorate of Social Welfare, West Bengal Social Welfare Board, Office of the Controller for Vagrancy, Office of Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities, West Bengal Commission for Women, West Bengal Women Development Undertaking and the Transgender Development Board.
The Department’s work has evolved along with the evolution of women’s rights. With a strong foundation laid by women specific laws, policies and schemes at the national and state level, the department is concentrating its energies on a critical demographic sector – adolescent girls.
Kanyashree Prakalpa, the state’s flagship social protection scheme for adolescent girls was launched in 2013. The Scheme’s objectives are to enhance the status of vulnerable girls between the ages of 13 and 19 through prevention of child marriage and promotion of education, financial inclusion and social inclusion, thereby ensuring that they complete the developmental tasks of adolescence in safety and wellbeing. Kanyashree Prakalpa is a model of good governance: its convergent operational platform, multi-layered monitoring mechanisms and end-to-end IT enablement (wbkanyashree.gov.in) promote citizen-centric services, efficient-service delivery, transparency and accountability. It has been nationally and internationally recognized as a good practice, and has received several prestigious awards.
⯁ The SABLA scheme works for improved health and nutritional status of adolescent girls in 7 districts in West Bengal, with a special focus on adolescent anemia. The Scheme also equips them with life-skills education and vocational skill sets, and provides them with relevant knowledge, awareness and information. SABLA and Kanyashree Prakalpa, the state’s flagship scheme for adolescent girls, implemented by the Department of Women Development, work in tandem – while out-of-school girls are encouraged to return to school and are assisted through the Kanyashree benefits, girls already in education and receiving Kanyashree are brought under the SABLA scheme.
⯁ To improve health and nutrition status of vulnerable and socially backward families, pregnant and lactating women receive cash through Indira Gandhi Matritva Sahyog Yojana, a conditional cash transfer scheme in the districts of Bankura, Jalpaiguri and Alipurduar.
⯁ While the West Bengal Women Development Undertaking has been implementing women-centric schemes since 1993, the State Mission Authority, formed under the National Mission of Empowerment of Women, is a more recent development. The Mission Authority is chaired by the Hon’ble Chief Minister of the State. Ministers of 21 key departments are members, and the Minister of the Women Development & Social Welfare Department is member-convener. The State Resource Centre for Women (SRCW) was established in 2012 to provide technical support to the Authority. Its primary task is to to strengthen inter- sectoral convergence and facilitate the process of coordinating all the women development and socio economic development programmes across the departments.
⯁ Although the central government’s Swawalamban provides vocational training to socially marginalized women and transgender persons, at the Chief Minister’s instance, the Department has designed and implements Swawalmban Special and MuktirAlo, which specifically supports those forced into commercial sex work and their children into alternative livelihoods.
⯁ While the state’s women form the major proportion of population served by the Department, the rights of certain smaller populations, are also the focus of the department. For homeless and destitute persons, the Directorate of Vagrancy runs 11 Vagrancy homes in various districts under the Bengal Vagrancy Act, and 45 shelters under the Shelter for Urban Homeless Scheme, a state sponsored scheme, in Kolkata, Howrah and Asansol Municipal areas. Apart from shelter and health services, inmates are provided vocational training so that they may return to living in society. Support and rehabilitation for drug addiction is provided though homes that are run by NGOs.
⯁ Social security is extended through Old Age Pensions, Widow Pensions and Disability Pensions. Apart from pensions, senior citizens in need can avail of shelter at various government homes. Under the West Bengal Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Rules, 2008, the department runs tribunals that hear cases of senior citizens who face harassment and eviction by their families.
⯁ The Commissioner of Disabilities works to ensure the rights of disabled persons of West Bengal, and monitors infringements and denial of their rights. The office of the Commissioner of Disabilities also implements several schemes and grants supporting rehabilitation, prosthetic aids, and scholarships and presides over awareness and advocacy events for disabled persons.
⯁ The Department’s “Little Star” Scheme provides medical, transport and housing facilities and other support such as bank loans to short-statured persons.
⯁ A major step forward has been the establishment of The West Bengal Transgender Development Board which was constituted in July 2015with the objective of improving the status of the highly marginalized and vulnerable transgender who are lagging behind on human development indices, especially education and employment. A State Coordination Committee has been constituted with members of several departments so that the challenges faced by the community – education, security, medical access, rehabilitation and welfare can be expedited. Mass awareness messages have already been broadcast over the radio, and the Commissioner of Kolkata Police has been requested to recruit transgender persons into the Civic Police Force.

The Constitution of India guarantees Fundamental Rights to all children in the country, and the Department of Child Development, Government of West Bengal is committed to ensuring that West Bengal's 2.99 crore citizens under the age of 18 (Census 2011) live healthy, safe childhoods that become strong foundations for dignified and productive adult lives.The Department's workis guided by the National Policy for Children 2013, and its responsibilities are to take affirmative measures - legislative, policy or otherwise - to promote and safeguard the right of all children to live and grow with equity, dignity, security and freedom.
In December 2014, the Department launched State Action Plan for Children 2014-2018 (SPAC), West Bengal being the first state in India to launch such a plan. The SPAC uses a child-rights framework to comprehensively map the responsibilities of key government departments that are tasked with affirmative action for children. These responsibilities are operationalized through the implementation of central and state government schemes, as well as specific actions taking into account West Bengal's local needs and critical issues.
SPAC is target-oriented; it has 54monitoring indicators closely aligned with India's national agenda for children and the country's commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals (Agenda 2030).These targets are closely monitored through high-level bi-annual meetings chaired by the Chief Secretary of the state. Similar District Plans of Action (2014-18) have been launched in Malda and Purulia. UNICEF's West Bengal Office has been a key technical partner in the SPAC process.
The development of a SPAC portal is currently underway; the portal will be an integrated virtual space for all stakeholders for convergent monitoring of data from grassroots to state level, the dissemination of information as well as a space for conducting policy dialogue on the issues of children's rights.
The Department has been performing various activities through itself and Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) Directorate, Directorate of Child Rights and Trafficking and Directorate of Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS) Directorate.
One of the Department's key responsibilities is the management of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) scheme, India's flagship scheme addressing the nutritional and developmental needs of children below six years, as well as the nutritional requirement of pregnant and lactating women. Within the core package of services mandated by the scheme's design, the Department has introduced several measures to enhance services and to give impetus to the special nutritional and developmental needs of mothers and children in West Bengal.
Child protection is a core mandate of the Department of Child Development, and the Department implements the Integrated Child Protection Scheme under the aegis of the Directorate of Child Rights and Trafficking. The State Child Protection Society (SCPS), West Bengal was established in 2010, and the scheme is being implemented in 20 districts through District Child Protection Units (DCPU). All mandated structures (CWC & JJB) and statutory bodies (WBCPCR) have been established, and the state is continually expanding its institutional and non-institutional care for children under the various bodies (J.J. Homes etc, open Shelters) mandated under ICPS. In addition, the West Bengal Government's Cottage Scheme continues to run shelters for destitute children, where apart from food, clothing and medical care, children are provided education and vocational training.
One of West Bengal's critical concerns is human trafficking, and the Department of Child Development is the nodal department for the effective prevention, protection and prosecution for all forms of trafficking and exploitation in women and childrenin the state.The Department chairs the State Advisory Committee on Combating Trafficking for Commercial sexual exploitation, as well as the State Task Force on Prevention of Trafficking & RRRI of Children and Women. It has undertaken several important initiatives over the last few years to ensure inter-state and international cooperation and coordination in combating human trafficking in women and children. These initiatives include developing cross-state and cross-country operational guidelines, a state plan of action to combat trafficking, MOUs with major destination states, and continual capacity building of state and district stakeholders on the child rights, missing children and trafficked persons. Information management and data collection is effected through several databases. The Track Child portal (www.trackthemissingchild.gov.in) provides a central interface for all stakeholders dealing with the cases of missing and recovered children.
Department of Child Development The Constitution of India guarantees Fundamental Rights to all children in the country, and the Department of Child Development, Government of West Bengal is committed to ensuring that West Bengal's 2.99 crore citizens under the age of 18 (Census 2011) live healthy, safe childhoods that become strong foundations for dignified and productive adult lives.The Department's workis guided by the National Policy for Children 2013, and its responsibilities are to take affirmative measures - legislative, policy or otherwise - to promote and safeguard the right of all children to live and grow with equity, dignity, security and freedom.
In December 2014, the Department launched State Action Plan for Children 2014-2018 (SPAC), West Bengal being the first state in India to launch such a plan. The SPAC uses a child-rights framework to comprehensively map the responsibilities of key government departments that are tasked with affirmative action for children. These responsibilities are operationalized through the implementation of central and state government schemes, as well as specific actions taking into account West Bengal's local needs and critical issues.
SPAC is target-oriented; it has 54monitoring indicators closely aligned with India's national agenda for children and the country's commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals (Agenda 2030).These targets are closely monitored through high-level bi-annual meetings chaired by the Chief Secretary of the state. Similar District Plans of Action (2014-18) have been launched in Malda and Purulia. UNICEF's West Bengal Office has been a key technical partner in the SPAC process.
The development of a SPAC portal is currently underway; the portal will be an integrated virtual space for all stakeholders for convergent monitoring of data from grassroots to state level, the dissemination of information as well as a space for conducting policy dialogue on the issues of children's rights.
The Department has been performing various activities through itself and Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) Directorate, Directorate of Child Rights and Trafficking and Directorate of Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS) Directorate.
One of the Department's key responsibilities is the management of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) scheme, India's flagship scheme addressing the nutritional and developmental needs of children below six years, as well as the nutritional requirement of pregnant and lactating women. Within the core package of services mandated by the scheme's design, the Department has introduced several measures to enhance services and to give impetus to the special nutritional and developmental needs of mothers and children in West Bengal.
Child protection is a core mandate of the Department of Child Development, and the Department implements the Integrated Child Protection Scheme under the aegis of the Directorate of Child Rights and Trafficking. The State Child Protection Society (SCPS), West Bengal was established in 2010, and the scheme is being implemented in 20 districts through District Child Protection Units (DCPU). All mandated structures (CWC & JJB) and statutory bodies (WBCPCR) have been established, and the state is continually expanding its institutional and non-institutional care for children under the various bodies (J.J. Homes etc, open Shelters) mandated under ICPS. In addition, the West Bengal Government's Cottage Scheme continues to run shelters for destitute children, where apart from food, clothing and medical care, children are provided education and vocational training.
One of West Bengal's critical concerns is human trafficking, and the Department of Child Development is the nodal department for the effective prevention, protection and prosecution for all forms of trafficking and exploitation in women and children in the state.The Department chairs the State Advisory Committee on Combating Trafficking for Commercial sexual exploitation, as well as the State Task Force on Prevention of Trafficking & RRRI of Children and Women. It has undertaken several important initiatives over the last few years to ensure inter-state and international cooperation and coordination in combating human trafficking in women and children. These initiatives include developing cross-state and cross-country operational guidelines, a state plan of action to combat trafficking, MOUs with major destination states, and continual capacity building of state and district stakeholders on the child rights, missing children and trafficked persons. Information management and data collection is effected through several databases. The TrackChild portal (www.trackthemissingchild.gov.in) provides a central interface for all stakeholders dealing with the cases of missing and recovered children.

several objectives of our organization

Improving child health and nutrition : ICDS aims to improve the nutritional and health status of children in the early years of life, thereby reducing instances of malnutrition, stunting, and underweight among children.
Promoting early childhood care and development: The program focuses on providing a package of services including supplementary nutrition, immunization, health check-ups, and referral services to ensure the holistic development of children in their early years.
Enhancing maternal health and nutrition: ICDS extends its services to pregnant women and lactating mothers by providing them with supplementary nutrition, health check-ups, and counseling to ensure their well-being during pregnancy and lactation.
Augmenting the capabilities of mothers: The program aims to empower mothers and caregivers by imparting knowledge and skills related to child care, nutrition, health, and hygiene practices.
Providing pre-school education: ICDS operates Anganwadi centers where pre-school education is provided to children in the age group of 3-6 years. This helps in the cognitive and socio-emotional development of children before they enter formal schooling.
Supporting the nutritional needs of vulnerable groups: ICDS specifically targets vulnerable groups such as children from economically disadvantaged families, tribal communities, and those residing in remote or inaccessible areas where access to healthcare and nutrition services is limited.
Strengthening community participation: The program encourages community involvement and participation in planning, implementation, and monitoring of services to ensure their relevance and effectiveness at the grassroots level.
Integrating services for comprehensive development: ICDS promotes convergence with other relevant programs and services such as the National Health Mission, Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK), and the Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana (PMMVY) to provide comprehensive care and support to children and mothers.

Several Services of our organization

Supplementary Nutrition: ICDS provides supplementary nutrition to children aged 6 months to 6 years and pregnant and lactating mothers. This aims to address malnutrition and ensure proper growth and development during critical early years.
Healthcare Services: ICDS offers healthcare services such as immunization, health check-ups, and referrals for medical treatment to children and mothers. Regular health monitoring helps in early detection and management of health issues.
Pre-school Education: ICDS includes pre-school education through Anganwadi centers, which are community-based centers established in rural and urban areas. These centers provide early childhood care and education, including activities to enhance cognitive, motor, and social skills of children.
Nutrition and Health Education: ICDS conducts nutrition and health education sessions for mothers and caregivers to promote optimal feeding practices, hygiene, sanitation, and preventive healthcare behaviors. This empowers communities with knowledge and skills to improve the health and well-being of children and mothers.
Supplemental Feeding: In addition to supplementary nutrition, ICDS provides take-home rations (THR) to eligible beneficiaries, ensuring continued access to nutritious food at home.
Growth Monitoring: Regular growth monitoring and anthropometric assessments are conducted to track the growth and nutritional status of children. Growth charts are maintained to monitor progress and identify children at risk of malnutrition.
Community Participation: ICDS encourages community participation and mobilization to support program implementation, monitoring, and evaluation. Local community members, including mothers' groups and village health committees, play an active role in ensuring the effective delivery of services.
Capacity Building: Training and capacity-building programs are conducted for Anganwadi workers and supervisors to enhance their knowledge and skills in child care, nutrition, health, and early childhood education.
Convergence with Other Sectors: ICDS promotes convergence with other sectors such as health, education, and social welfare to ensure comprehensive services for children and mothers. Collaboration with other government programs helps in addressing the multifaceted needs of beneficiaries.
Monitoring and Evaluation: ICDS emphasizes robust monitoring and evaluation mechanisms to assess the program's effectiveness, identify gaps, and inform decision-making for program improvement and expansion.