ABSTRACT India’s judicial system is increasingly criminalizing consensual adolescent romance under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, transforming a child-protection law into a tool for social control. Daily headlines, from The Times of India to Dainik Jagran chronicle cases where young men, often barely out of school, face rape charges and denied bail for relationships with peers just months younger, while girls endure forced custody that silences their agency. This pattern reveals a “broken system” at war with human biology, where families weaponize non-bailable provisions to enforce caste, religious, and patriarchal norms, conflating teenage desire with predation. Originally intended to shield vulnerable children from abuse, POCSO’s rigid framework evaporates nuance, treating all under-18 interactions as exploitative regardless of consent or context. Young lovers suffer shattered futures, criminal records, stigma, and despair leading to suicides, while the law ignores the developmental realities of adolescence. In a digitally connected era, Indian teens navigate accelerated psychological maturity and identity formation, yet the law clings to an outdated chronological threshold of 18 for consent capacity, viewing minors as asexual innocents. Keywords: POCSO Act, adolescent consent, teenage romance, judicial overreach, social norms, age of maturity.
Aditya et al. (Thu,) studied this question.