State Human Rights Commission

Indian Polity & Governance
Constitution VerifiedUPSC Verified
Version 1Updated 5 Mar 2026

The Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993, as amended in 2019, provides for the establishment of State Human Rights Commissions under Chapter IV (Sections 21-25). Section 21 states: 'A State Government may constitute a body to be known as the Human Rights Commission for that State to exercise the powers conferred upon, and to perform the functions assigned to, a State Commission under this Act.' Th…

Quick Summary

State Human Rights Commissions (SHRCs) are statutory bodies established under the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993, to protect and promote human rights at the state level. Each state government may constitute an SHRC to work within its territorial jurisdiction, complementing the National Human Rights Commission's work at the national level.

The commission consists of a Chairperson (former Chief Justice of a High Court) and up to four members with expertise in human rights matters, appointed by the Governor on recommendations of a committee headed by the Chief Minister.

SHRCs have extensive powers including investigation of human rights violations by state agencies, visiting detention centers, summoning witnesses, examining documents, and making recommendations for reforms.

They can investigate complaints against police, prison authorities, and other state government agencies, but cannot investigate matters more than one year old or those pending before courts. The commissions play both protective and promotional roles - investigating violations and spreading human rights awareness.

However, their recommendations are not legally binding, and effectiveness varies significantly across states due to factors like political will, resource allocation, and quality of appointments. The 2019 amendment strengthened SHRCs by expanding human rights definition, ensuring better representation, and enhancing coordination with NHRC.

Key challenges include inadequate funding, political interference, lack of enforcement powers, and limited public awareness. Despite limitations, SHRCs have made significant contributions in addressing custodial violence, prison reforms, and protection of marginalized communities' rights.

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  • SHRCs established under Protection of Human Rights Act 1993, amended 2019
  • Composition: Chairperson (former High Court CJ) + max 4 members
  • Appointed by Governor on CM-led committee recommendation
  • Powers: investigate, visit jails, summon witnesses, recommend (not enforce)
  • One-year limitation period (exceptions allowed)
  • 2019 changes: expanded HR definition, mandatory representation, coordination with NHRC
  • Cannot investigate: >1 year old cases (except exceptional), court-pending matters
  • Key challenge: recommendatory powers only, no enforcement authority

Vyyuha Quick Recall - 'SHRC POWER': S-State level jurisdiction, H-High Court CJ as Chair, R-Recommendatory powers only, C-Committee appointment (CM leads), P-Protection of HR Act 1993, O-One year limitation, W-Women & minorities representation (2019), E-Exceptional circumstances waiver, R-Reports to NHRC coordination. Remember: 'Can VISIT jails, SUMMON witnesses, RECOMMEND action, but cannot ENFORCE decisions' - the four key power distinctions that UPSC loves to test!

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