Off The Beaten Track Rethinking Gender Justice For Indian Women Guide

It is time to step off the beaten track. True gender justice in India is not just about more laws; it is about a radical reordering of access , recognition , and reparations .

The face of the Indian women’s movement has historically been urban, educated, and often upper-caste. But the Muslim woman seeking triple talaq justice (now criminalized) fears destitution more than the divorce itself. The tribal woman in Bastar faces violence from Maoist commanders and security forces alike. The transgender woman is excluded from almost all gender violence laws. Rethinking justice means abandoning a one-size-fits-all framework. It means separate fast-track courts for atrocity cases (SC/ST Act), recognizing khap panchayat violence as organized crime, and including trans and non-binary persons in every definition of "woman" in legal texts. It is time to step off the beaten track

Mainstream discourse fixates on safety in public spaces—buses, streets, workplaces. But for most Indian women, the first and most persistent site of violence is the home. The Justice Verma Committee (2013) made sweeping recommendations, but it largely sidestepped the marital rape exception. Off the beaten track, justice means confronting the private sphere not as a cultural sanctuary, but as a political arena. It means recognizing that a wife’s consent is not a perpetual contract. It means criminalizing marital rape, not as a Western import, but as a recognition of vyakti (individual) over kutumb (family). But the Muslim woman seeking triple talaq justice

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