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Why Enforcement Is the Weak Link in Rule of Law

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India has some of the most comprehensive legislation in the world for environmental protection, labour rights, food safety, building regulations, pollution control, financial regulation, consumer protection, and occupational health. It also has, by most international assessments, significant enforcement gaps in most of these areas.  The World Justice Project's Rule of Law Index 2025 ranks India at 114 out of 143 on civil justice and 89 out of 143 on criminal justice — not because India lacks laws, but because enforcement, timely adjudication, and equal access to the legal system fall substantially short of what the laws on paper promise. The challenge is not legislative; India has been legislating comprehensively for decades. The challenge is the distance between law enacted and law applied. Representational image: Why Enforcement Is the Weak Link in Rule of Law This enforcement gap operates across the entire regulatory and criminal landscape. Environmental courts — including ...

How India Interprets Secularism Legally

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The word "secular" was not in the original text of the Indian Constitution adopted in 1950 — it was added to the Preamble by the 42nd Constitutional Amendment in 1976, during the Emergency. The addition confirmed in text what was already present in practice: the Constitution's elaborate architecture of religious freedom, minority rights, and prohibition on state-sponsored religion had constituted a form of secularism from the beginning, even without the explicit word.  The Supreme Court in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973) had identified secularism as a basic structure feature before the word appeared in the Preamble, and confirmed this in S.R. Bommai v. Union of India (1994) — where it held that any use of religion for electoral purposes by a political party would justify President's Rule in that state, given that secularism was itself a constitutional commitment the state was bound to uphold. Representational Image: How India Interprets Secularism Legall...

How Constitutional Amendments Work in India

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The Constitution of India has been amended 106 times since it came into force in January 1950. This is the frequency that reflects both the framers' design choice to make amendment possible without the extreme rigidity of some constitutional systems, and the political realities of a large, diverse democracy where governance needs have evolved substantially over seven decades.  Unlike the United States Constitution, which has been formally amended only 27 times in 236 years, or the United Kingdom, which has no codified constitution to amend, India's Parliament has used constitutional amendment as a regular legislative tool — to expand the lists of laws in the Ninth Schedule, to introduce reservations in educational institutions, to reorganise states, to create new rights like the right to education, and to restructure the relationship between Parliament and the courts following judicial decisions that Parliament disagreed with. Representational Image: How Constitutional Amendme...

Why Directive Principles Still Matter In India

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The Directive Principles of State Policy, set out in Part IV of the Indian Constitution (Articles 36 to 51), are constitutionally unique. They are described as "fundamental in the governance of the country" but explicitly declared non-justiciable — no court can compel the state to implement them. They direct the state without enforcing the direction.  Dr. Ambedkar, who introduced them in the Constituent Assembly, defended this design on practical grounds: newly independent India could not afford to make every social and economic aspiration immediately enforceable without overwhelming the legal system and imposing obligations beyond the state's fiscal capacity. The Directive Principles were, he argued, the other half of the constitutional project — the part that would make political democracy meaningful by progressively creating social and economic democracy as resources and capacity allowed. Representational Image: Why Directive Principles Still Matter In India Seven deca...

How Law Is Sometimes Applied Unevenly in India

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The Constitution of India guarantees equality before the law in Article 14 and prohibits discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth in Article 15. These guarantees are real, justiciable, and enforced by courts that have struck down discriminatory laws and arbitrary official action. But the experience of law in India is systematically uneven by social position, economic standing, and political connection. This has evolved into a pattern so consistent that it constitutes not a series of aberrations but a structural feature of how the legal system functions.  The NCRB Prison Statistics 2023 shows that Dalits, Adivasis, and OBCs together constitute approximately 69.3% of India's prison population while comprising roughly the same share of the general population. This is a figure that is either an accidental statistical outcome or the product of differential policing, differential bail access, and differential legal representation. Academic research from ...

How Parliamentary Disruptions Change Outcomes

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A parliamentary disruption is not simply noise. When members of the Indian Parliament shout slogans, display placards, march into the well of the House, or force repeated adjournments, the consequences extend well beyond the disruption itself. Time lost cannot be recovered. Questions that would have been answered in Question Hour are either abandoned or converted to written replies.  Bills that would have been debated are passed by voice vote in the chaos, or held over to another day, or referred to the next session. The government's accountability to the legislature — the foundational purpose of a parliamentary system — is weakened every time a sitting ends without the business it was scheduled to transact. Representational Image: How Parliamentary Disruptions Change Outcomes The Vidhi Legal Policy Centre's 2016 report on disruptions in the Indian Parliament defines a disruption as an "undesired statement, action and gesture that not only delays the transaction of busines...

How MPs Use Questions to Force Accountability

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Parliamentary questions are the most frequently used formal mechanism by which Indian MPs hold the government to account. In each five-year Lok Sabha, tens of thousands of questions are submitted, balloted, listed, answered — or evaded — creating a voluminous, searchable, and often revealing record of government positions, admissions, and silences.  A question compels a minister to either state the official government position on the matter, admit ignorance or non-availability of data, or — through the supplementary question process — be pushed toward an admission they had not intended to make. The Lok Sabha Secretariat's own description captures the intent: the Question Hour is when "the Government is, as it were, put on its trial." Representational Image: How MPs Use Questions to Force Accountability The question as an accountability tool has significant structural advantages. Unlike a debate, it requires a specific response from a specific minister on a specific matter...
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