[7] Beginning in 1928, AIWC began to raise money to open the Lady Irwin College of Domestic Science.
[4] Also in 1928, the AIWC recognized that women's education couldn't be addressed properly without dealing with "harmful social customs.
[12][13] The organisation was involved in lobbying Parliament to pass new laws to protect women in India and also to help expand voting rights.
[16] When India was fighting for independence, many more radical members left the organisation in order to become "nationalist agitators.
[17] One of the initial main objectives of the AIWC was education of women, and it remains a primary concern today.