MARRIAGE EQUALITY AND JUDICIAL CRAFT IN INDIA: NEW APPROACHES TO CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY

被引:0
|
作者
Dam, Shubhankar [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Portsmouth, Publ Law & Governance, Portsmouth, England
来源
PUBLIC LAW REVIEW | 2023年 / 34卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
India's family law is uniquely complex. A byzantine maze of rules governs marriage, divorce, succession, adoption, and related matters. Hindus obey one set of laws.1 Sikhs observe a different set.2 Similarly, Christians,3 Muslims,4 and Parsees5 apply their own laws. But this religious segregation is not categorical. Emblematic of the enigma that is India, some Christians, Jews and Muslims may choose to apply Hindu laws.6 The Constitution also disapplies these faith-based legislation to select geographies, especially the north-east region. Tribal groups residing in these areas are guaranteed their customs regarding marriage, property, etc.7 These religious and geographic segregations are not the only axes of complexity. The laws are also gendered. Age of marriage varies by sex. Under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, it is 21 for men and 18 for women.8 For Muslims, the age is still lower: girls no younger than 15 may marry.9 Similarly, men and women inherit properties differently.10 Sitting alongside these segregated and gendered laws are two secular laws: the Special Marriage Act, 195411 (SMA) and the Foreign Marriage Act, 196912 (FMA). The SMA enables inter-faith couples and those without faith to marry. (However, couples of the same faith, too, can invoke the SMA instead of any denominational legislation.) And the FMA allows Indian citizens with foreign spouses to marry in India or register their foreign marriages in India. But these secular laws also harbour some religious precepts. The SMA, for instance, deploys Hindu concepts to define eligibility conditions for marriage.13 And it is gendered: marriage is prohibited unless men and women are at least 21 and 18 years of age respectively.14 So what happens when gays and lesbians enter this staggering morass and claim a fundamental right to marry? The Supreme Court of India wrestled with the complexity in Supriyo v Union of India (Supriyo).15
引用
收藏
页数:158
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] New constitutional ideas: Can new parliamentary models resist judicial dominance when interpreting rights?
    Hiebert, JL
    TEXAS LAW REVIEW, 2004, 82 (07) : 1963 - 1987
  • [43] Titian's 's Allegory of Marriage: New Approaches.
    Koncz, Caroline
    SIXTEENTH CENTURY JOURNAL, 2023, 54 (3-4): : 440 - 442
  • [44] The rights of the new untouchables: A constitutional analysis of HIV jurisprudence in India
    Krishnan, JK
    HUMAN RIGHTS QUARTERLY, 2003, 25 (03) : 791 - 819
  • [45] Clinical validity of the Wechsler scales: New psychometric approaches
    Rolfhus, E.
    Zhu, J. J.
    Holdnack, J.
    Courville, T.
    Weiss, L.
    CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2006, 20 (03) : 595 - 595
  • [47] Marriage and Divorce in Moroccan Family Law: The New Law on Equality between Men and Women
    Rude-Antoine, Edwige
    DROIT ET CULTURES, 2010, 59
  • [48] Association of the New York State Marriage Equality Act With Changes in Health Insurance Coverage
    Gonzales, Gilbert
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2015, 314 (07): : 727 - 728
  • [49] Reliability and validity of a new physical activity questionnaire for India
    Anjana, Ranjit Mohan
    Sudha, Vasudevan
    Lakshmipriya, Nagarajan
    Subhashini, Sivasankaran
    Pradeepa, Rajendra
    Geetha, Loganathan
    Bai, Mookambika Ramya
    Gayathri, Rajagopal
    Deepa, Mohan
    Unnikrishnan, Ranjit
    Binu, Valsalakumari Sreekumaran Nair
    Kurpad, Anura V.
    Mohan, Viswanathan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL NUTRITION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, 2015, 12
  • [50] Reliability and validity of a new physical activity questionnaire for India
    Ranjit Mohan Anjana
    Vasudevan Sudha
    Nagarajan Lakshmipriya
    Sivasankaran Subhashini
    Rajendra Pradeepa
    Loganathan Geetha
    Mookambika Ramya Bai
    Rajagopal Gayathri
    Mohan Deepa
    Ranjit Unnikrishnan
    Valsalakumari Sreekumaran Nair Binu
    Anura V Kurpad
    Viswanathan Mohan
    International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 12