Charting a New Path Toward Gender Equality in India: From Religious Personal Laws to a Uniform Civil Code

Indiana Law Journal, Dec 2008

Symposium: Missing Information: The Scientific Data Gap in Conservation and Chemical Regulation, held on March 24, 2006 at Indiana University School of Law- Bloomington.

Article PDF cannot be displayed. You can download it here:

https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1215&context=ilj

Charting a New Path Toward Gender Equality in India: From Religious Personal Laws to a Uniform Civil Code

Indiana Law Journal Volume 83 | Issue 2 Article 10 Spring 2008 Charting a New Path Toward Gender Equality in India: From Religious Personal Laws to a Uniform Civil Code Shalina A. Chibber Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington Follow this and additional works at: http://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ilj Part of the Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, and the Religion Law Commons Recommended Citation Chibber, Shalina A. (2008) "Charting a New Path Toward Gender Equality in India: From Religious Personal Laws to a Uniform Civil Code," Indiana Law Journal: Vol. 83: Iss. 2, Article 10. Available at: http://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ilj/vol83/iss2/10 This Note is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Journals at Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Indiana Law Journal by an authorized administrator of Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. For more information, please contact . Charting a New Path Toward Gender Equality in India: From Religious Personal Laws to a Uniform Civil Code SHALINA A. CHIBBER* INTRODUCTION In India, only Muslim men may practice polygamy, ' and Hindu sons inherit greater shares of their parents' estates than their sisters do.2 While one's religion determines which law will apply to him or her regarding marriage, divorce, maintenance, guardianship, adoption, inheritance, and succession,3 a common thread woven through all of India's religious personal law systems is the patriarchal dominance of men and the unequal treatment of women. Given the seemingly strong protections of gender equality in India's Constitution, however, it is puzzling that the Indian government can uphold facially discriminatory laws against women, especially when such laws affect women's lives so intimately. In the name of protecting the rights of religious communities, Parliament has thus far skirted its responsibilities to some of the most vulnerable individuals within those communities-the women. The religious personal law systems of India have not helped Indian women, nor have they been effective in protecting the rights of the religious communities in which Indian women live. Rather, the preservation of these separate laws has served to deepen the division between the majority Hindu population and minority religions, particularly Islam. The personal laws have also perpetuated-and arguably enhancedtensions between these two groups by reinforcing identities that oppose one another. India must take care to move away from religious personal laws and toward a uniform civil code, as envisioned by Article 44 of the Indian Constitution.4 At present, the debate over a uniform civil code appears hopelessly divided along both political and religious lines. However, the turmoil is rooted in concerns over the process-and who controls that process-much more so than the concept itself. A uniform civil code constructed by a majority Hindu Parliament will not be accepted as legitimate among minority groups no matter how fairly it may be drafted. The answer, then, lies with promoting a process that brings all concerned voices to the table: men and women of all religious communities must be included. To be successful, a uniform civil code needs to reflect India's diversity as well as its commitment to equality. * J. D. Candidate, 2008, Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington; B.A., 2005, University of Notre Dame. I would like to thank Professor Susan Williams for her insightful comments on gender issues from a constitutional perspective. I would also like to thank Alex Schaefer for his loving support. 1. See MARTHA C. NUSSBAUM, WOMEN AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: THE CAPABILITIES APPROACH 229-30 (2000). 2. See Robert D. Baird, Gender Implicationsfor a Uniform Civil Code, in RELIGION AND PERSONAL LAW INSECULAR INDIA: A CALL TO JUDGMENT 145, 149 (Gerald James Larson ed., 2001). 3. Laura Dudley Jenkins, PersonalLaw and Reservations: Volition and Religion in ContemporaryIndia, in RELIGION AND PERSONAL LAW INSECULAR INDIA, supranote 2, at 104, 104. 4. INDIA CONST. art. 44 ('"The State shall endeavour to secure for the citizens a uniform civil code throughout the territory of India."). INDIANA LA WJOURNAL [Vol. 83:695 This Note is divided into four parts. Part I focuses on the equality provisions and religious protections set forth in the Indian Constitution, their interplay with religious personal laws, and the significance of Article 44. Part II outlines the three basic problems created by the religious personal law systems. It argues that the systems promote the myth of state neutrality at the expense of women's rights; freeze religious reform and thereby silence internal dissent; and intensify the connection between personal law and identity, thus heightening tensions between majority and minority populations and strengthening prejudices. All of these trends weaken the ability of the group and its individuals to manage internal change, obtain protection from the state, and trust the state generally. Part III details the reasons why the problems caused by religious personal laws cannot be solved piecemeal by the courts, and why the legislature cannot be trusted to draft a legitimate uniform civil code under present circumstances. This Part also rejects as inadequate alternative approaches to a uniform civil code proffered by legal scholars. Finally, Part IV introduces a multistep plan for religious communities-rather than Parliament-to move India toward a uniform civil code that addresses each of the basic problems caused by the religious personal laws. The goal of this gradual process is to bring about new measures for gender equality without displacing political power from religious groups to legislators. By facilitating the transition to a uniform civil code, religious communities will maintain control of the process, thus legitimizing the results and fulfilling India's constitutional vision of unity through diversity. I. INDIA'S CONSTITUTIONAL VISION: UNITY THROUGH DIVERSITY When India's Constituent Assembly set out to draft the Indian Constitution in the late 1940s, it was faced with no small task. The country was still recovering from the violent partition of India and Pakistan following India's independence from Great Britain. 5 While many Muslims left India for Pakistan en masse, those who stayed behind harbored feelings of distrust, rejection, and fear of the majority Hindu population. 6 Because of the hostility between the Muslim and Hindu populations of India, this Note focuses particularly on the Muslim personal law system and the tension between the Muslim minority and Hindu majority regarding the debate over a uniform civil code. In the context of this religious turmoil, the Constituent Assembly was especially concerned with minority and religious rights. 7 On the other hand, the drafters also sought to provide equality among all individuals regardless of religion, caste, or sex, as th (...truncated)


This is a preview of a remote PDF: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1215&context=ilj
Article home page: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ilj/vol83/iss2/10

Shalina A. Chibber. Charting a New Path Toward Gender Equality in India: From Religious Personal Laws to a Uniform Civil Code, Indiana Law Journal, 2008, pp. 10, Volume 83, Issue 2,