Abstract

There have been innumerable debates about gender in India over the years. Much of it includes women’s positing in society, their education, health, economic position, gender equality etc. What one can conclude from such discussions is that women have always held a certain paradoxical position in our developing country.
 The women position in Indian Judiciary has again been a debatable, topic which has henceforth never been into exact numerical representation. The women clan involved into the legal network of benches has been notably less. The women position has been the highest in the Supreme Court of India with ‘Nine’ Judges.
 The research work includes statistical data with the research of Vidhi legal policy. “The District Courts and the courts below them comprise the ‘lower’ or ‘subordinate’ judiciary. These courts lie under the administrative control of High Courts. Each judicial district in India has one District Court, below which lie civil and criminal courts of original jurisdiction,” the study notes, and finds that 71% judges in the subordinate judiciary across India are male.
 Motivation/Background: The women position has been the highest in the Supreme Court of India with ‘Nine’ Judges. The women clan involved into the legal network of benches has been notably less.
 Method: The fundamental protestant of the research are ‘women’, their count in the benches of Indian Judiciary, specifically over the High Courts and the Supreme Court. So what has been the reason behind such a low count of women?
 What has been the numerical denomination of women benches in High Courts and Supreme Courts over the past years?
 Results: Women were relegated to the household, and made to submit to the male-dominated patriarchal society, as has always been prevalent in our country. Indian women, who fought as equals with men in the nationalist struggle, were not given that free public space anymore. They became homemakers, and were mainly meant to build a strong home to support their men who were to build the newly independent country.
 Conclusions: Women were reduced to being second class citizens. The national female literacy rate was an alarmingly low 8.6%. The Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) for girls was 24.8% at primary level and 4.6% at the upper primary level (in the 11-14 years age group). There existed insoluble social and cultural barriers to education of women and access to organized schooling.

Highlights

  • Research Aim The aim of the work and the overall purpose of the study is to appraise the count of women in legal fraternity

  • Scope of Research The scope of the research topic includes the study of the women proposition in the Indian Judiciary and to re-assess the reasons behind such low numeral of women position in Indian Benches

  • The numerical presentation revealed in the aforementioned Tables very clearly establishes the fact that women have very less hold on the benches of Indian Judiciary

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Research Aim The aim of the work and the overall purpose of the study is to appraise the count of women in legal fraternity. To succinct the research domain, the research intents to lay precise data about the female position in Indian Judiciary. The research paper assembles and addresses the numerical representation of women in Indian High Courts and Supreme Court, i.e. they reflect the aspirations and expectations of the research topic. Scope of Research The scope of the research topic includes the study of the women proposition in the Indian Judiciary and to re-assess the reasons behind such low numeral of women position in Indian Benches. Objective of the Study The below listed objectives are deduced from the research questions in order to have comprehensive answers to them

Background
Female Judges of the Supreme Court of India
Kumari Naheed Ara Bar
Miss Asha Arora
Kumari
Miss Sonia Giridhar Service
Numerical Evaluation
Vidhi Legal Policy
Appallingly Low Number of Women in Lower Judiciary
Biases in Promotion Process
The Number Game
Discrimination
Conclusion and Suggestion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call