Versuchen GOLD - Frei

UNFINISHED AGENDA - GENDER REFORMS IN POST-INDEPENDENCE INDIA

The Business Guardian

|

August 26, 2025

Legal reforms abound; yet Bhati's murder and Subhash's suicide indict our culture-India at 131st place on gender parity. What is the problem?

- RUCHIRA TALAPATRA

UNFINISHED AGENDA - GENDER REFORMS IN POST-INDEPENDENCE INDIA

The stark contrast between India's official rhetoric on women and the grim realities faced by many of its daughters is visible in recent cases. In January 2025, 28-year-old Nikki Bhati was allegedly set on fire by her husband and mother-in-law over a Rs 36 lakh dowry demand.

In late 2024, software engineer Atul Subhash died by suicide, leaving behind a 24-page note accusing his estranged wife's family of extortion and wrongful harassment under India's anti-dowry laws. These tragedies shocked a nation that now ranks 131st out of 146 countries in the World Economic Forum's 2025 Global Gender Gap Report, behind Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal, but luckily ahead of Pakistan. They force the question: if we can celebrate holidays like Rakhi, Holi, Diwali, Independence Day, Women's Day and Mother's Day, aren't we celebrating women all the time? If we are inclusive of "women-led" vision of development, then, why do so many Indian women still pay with their lives?

COLONIAL LEGACIES AND EARLY REFORMS

India's gender politics were profoundly shaped by colonial and pre-colonial history. British colonial reformers intervened in practices like sati (widow immolation) ostensibly to "save" Indian women, encapsulated in Spivak's critique of the colonial narrative "white men are saving brown women.

from brown men". After independence, India's framers enshrined gender equality in law. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar - principal architect of the Constitution - insisted that the "progress of a community [is] measured by the degree of progress which women have achieved".

The new Republic enacted landmark legislation: the Hindu Marriage Act (1955) and Hindu Succession Act (1956) granted women divorce and inheritance rights, and in 1961 India passed the Dowry Prohibition Act (though its early enforcement was weak).

Nevertheless, entrenched patriarchal norms survived.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

Indore's diarrhoea spike is a reminder: 'clean city' does not automatically mean safe water

Indore’s health administration is racing to contain a waterborne diarrhoea outbreak centred on Bhagirathpura, after a fresh round of screening detected 20 new cases even as 142 patients remained under treatment in hospitals.

time to read

2 mins

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

Assembly session: Sirsa, Sood hail CM’s 11 months of governance

As the Winter Session of the Delhi Legislative Assembly got underway on Monday, Delhi ministers Manjinder Singh Sirsa and Ashish Sood highlighted the significance of the proceedings, with key issues such as governance, pollution and public accountability expected to be taken up during the four-day session.

time to read

1 min

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

CM Rekha urges all MLAs to actively participate in Winter Assembly session

Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on Monday welcomed the winter session of the Legislative Assembly, urging both the ruling party and the opposition to fulfil their responsibilities during the proceedings.

time to read

1 min

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

WRITING JANUARY 6 INTO MEMORY

Five years after the U.S. Capitol attack, the argument is no longer only about what happened in the building. It is about how democracies decide what counts as history—through trials, pardons, plaques, and textbooks.

time to read

5 mins

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

AAP protests in Delhi Assembly premises over rising air pollution

Aam Aadmi Party MLAs on Monday staged a protest inside the Delhi Assembly premises, drawing attention to the worsening air pollution levels in the national capital.

time to read

1 min

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

Free legal help on WhatsApp for property and divorce queries

A large part of India’s “justice gap” is not about spectacular trials; it is about everyday legal confusion—property paperwork, succession disputes, tenancy conflicts, maintenance claims, domestic violence remedies, and the first intimidating step of choosing the right forum.

time to read

2 mins

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

TRAI SLAPS RS 150 CRORE PENALTY ON TELCOS OVER SPAM VIOLATIONS

The Rs 150 crore penalty imposed for three years beginning 2020, however, has been challenged by telecom operators.

time to read

2 mins

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

DELHI GOVT ALLOCATES RS 1 LAKH CRORE BUDGET FOCUSING ON 10 KEY SECTORS

Delhi Lieutenant Governor Vinai Kumar Saxena on Monday outlined the Delhi government’s reform agenda and development priorities while addressing the Legislative Assembly, highlighting major budgetary allocations, ease-of-doing-business measures, labour law reforms and infrastructure expansion, particularly in the health sector.

time to read

1 mins

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

CAPTURE OF NICOLÁS MADURO: IS IT LEGAL TO SEIZE A PRESIDENT OF ANOTHER COUNTRY?

Even if a foreign court claims jurisdiction over alleged crimes, a sitting head of state generally enjoys “personal immunity” (immunity ratione personae) from another country’s criminal jurisdiction while in office, along with inviolability from arrest.

time to read

2 mins

January 06, 2026

The Business Guardian

The Business Guardian

Tariff threat over Russian oil puts India at crossroads: GTRI

As the United States steps up pressure on countries buying Russian oil, India faces a critical policy choice, with continued ambiguity likely to invite higher trade costs, according to a report by the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI).

time to read

1 mins

January 06, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size