
The Justice Verma Committee, in 2012, was established to recommend legal reforms after the Sawahaya gangrape case, which included Ribu’s proposals, such as new crimes such as the accountability, staring, travel, and smuggling of public servants.
Ribu has also affected how Indian courts handle child sexual abuse, child marriage and child sexual abuse and abuse material (CSEAM). Their legal interventions have shaped both policy and practice, leading to real changes for weak children. Through Just Rights for Children (JRC), he has created one of the largest legal child protection networks in India, working in 28 states. The network fights systemic child abuse, ensures justice for the remaining people, and justifies criminals. Ribu child marriage is also a driving force behind the free India, a movement that started from the ground.
The beginning of a grassroots level effort under the leadership of thousands of women is now India’s largest civil society campaign against child marriage. In just two years, it has once changed public interaction and legal action on crime generally commonly commonly commonly commonly repaired by tradition.

In 2024, Ribu helped launch India Bal Vivah Mukt Bharat And Nepal’s child marriage -free campaign. Their call to end child marriage now units communities to protect children from this social crime and protect children from this social crime. Established in 1963, the World Jurist Association has honored legal publishers such as Nelson Mandela, Winston Churchill, Ruth Badder Ginsburg, and Rene Cassin – men and women whose legal vision helped rebuild the world.
With this medal, Bhuwan Ribu joined the rank of those whose work changed the system and touched life. Conducted from May 4 – 6, World Law Congress 2025 brought more than 300 speakers from more than 70 countries.

The medal of honor is reserved for jurists, whose work has global implications for human rights and justice – among them for presidents, Prime Minister, Judge, Prosecutor, Ministers, Educationists and Lawyers.