HomeNewsOpinionPolicy | We need a paradigm shift in our approach towards justice delivery

Policy | We need a paradigm shift in our approach towards justice delivery

India has one of the world’s lowest spending on the judiciary, with just about 0.01 per cent of its GDP being expended to ensure delivery of justice. India also has one of the poorest judges per population ratios. This must change.

May 10, 2020 / 12:46 IST
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Representative Image
Representative Image

At a joint conference of chief ministers and chief justices of high courts in 2016, the then Chief Justice of India TS Thakur literally broke down in front of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, lamenting about India’s overworked judiciary, which he said was fast losing the common man’s trust.

It was the same lament that the incumbent CJI Ranjan Gogoi made on the eve of his assuming office two years later. Delivering the third Ramnath Goenka lecture in New Delhi, Gogoi said, “The judiciary today is not a poor workman who blames his tools, but it is a workman with no tools”.

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“Not a reform but a revolution is what it needs, to be able to meet the challenges on the ground and to keep this institution serviceable for a common man and relevant for the nation,” he said, drawing attention to the desperate need to improve justice dispensation.

Now, coming back to Justice Thakur’s poignant moment, Modi, in whose presence the event unfolded, assured the CJI of his government’s resolve to help. However, little was done to rectify the problem. With Modi in his second term, it has to be seen if there will be any real improvement.