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    A Critical Study of Systemic Judicial Delay and Its Gendered Impact on Legal Aid Accessibility and Equality before Law
    (Writersgram Law House, 2025) Tulika Singh
    Judicial delay remains one of the most entrenched obstacles to justice delivery, with systemic backlogs and procedural inefficiencies disproportionately affecting vulnerable populations. This study offers a critical analysis of systemic judicial delay and its gendered impact on legal aid accessibility and equality before law. While judicial delay undermines the principle of speedy justice for all, its consequences are particularly acute for women and gender minorities, especially in cases involving sexual offences, domestic violence, family disputes, and socio-economic rights. The extended timelines not only prolong trauma but also perpetuate economic dependency, reduce faith in legal institutions, and deter future engagement with the justice system. The research examines the constitutional mandate of equality under Articles 14 and 21, statutory frameworks under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, and jurisprudential developments affirming the right to legal aid. It highlights how inadequate institutional capacity, underfunding of legal aid services, and lack of gender sensitivity within the legal aid apparatus exacerbate structural barriers. Drawing upon empirical studies, reports of the National Judicial Data Grid (NIDG), NALSA, and comparative insights from jurisdictions such as South Africa and Canada, the study maps how intersectional factors of caste, class, and rural-urban divides further intensify gendered disadvantage. The paper argues that systemic judicial delay, coupled with insufficient access to quality legal aid, constitutes a form of structural discrimination, violating the constitutional guarantee of equality before law. It recommends reforms including time-bound adjudication in gender-sensitive cases, institutional strengthening of legal aid services, incorporation of gender-sensitivity training, and periodic judicial audits of delay. Ultimately, the study positions equitable and timely access to justice not merely as a procedural necessity but as a substantive right essential for realising gender justice in India's legal system.
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    Ambedkar's Perspective on Achieving Social Equality in Indian Society
    (Opus Publication, 2025) Sadaf Khan
    Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's perspective on social justice is based on his commitment to the rights of marginalized communities, particularly the untouchables, and his vision of a society built on equality, liberty, and fraternity. As an economist, legal scholar, and social reformer, Ambedkar criticised the deeply rooted caste-based prejudice that dominated Indian culture and emphasised the necessity of structural changes to end inequality. His idea of social justice included the socioeconomic empowerment of marginalised communities in addition to legal rights and political engagement. This chapter will going to explain the Ambedkar's view on social justice and how he worked to attain and establish the society with justice and equality. Ambedkar regarded the caste system as a significant barrier to equality and human dignity, and he maintained that it must only be abolished in order to attain true social justice. He believed that only by means of having access to economic possibilities, political representation, and education could the marginalised be socially and economically uplifted. His support of reservations in legislative, employment, and educational institutions was essential to his conviction that affirmative action might be used to right historical wrongs.