Gender Justice For Indian Women: Off The Beaten Track Rethinking
That is the road less traveled. And that is the only road worth taking.
For decades, the map of gender justice in India has been drawn along familiar highways: higher conviction rates for rape, more women in parliament, longer maternity leave, and stricter dowry laws. These are vital arteries of reform. Yet, for the woman walking the dusty path from a remote forest-fringe village to a district court, or the Dalit woman navigating both an upper-caste landlord and a patriarchal household, these highways often lead to dead ends. That is the road less traveled
We frame violence as trauma. But for a self-employed craftswoman or a daily-wage laborer, violence is also an economic shock. A single episode of domestic abuse can mean lost wages, destroyed tools of work (looms, sewing machines, pottery wheels), and confiscated savings by the husband. Current compensation schemes are paltry (often ₹25,000-50,000) and arrive years later. Off the beaten track, gender justice requires immediate economic reparations : emergency cash transfers, asset replacement, and a "violence leave" (paid leave to escape, file complaints, and relocate). Without economic mobility, a woman simply returns to the abuser. These are vital arteries of reform
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 . But for a self-employed craftswoman or a daily-wage