1st Edition

Affirmative Action for Economically Weaker Sections and Upper-Castes in Indian Constitutional Law Context, Judicial Discourse, and Critique

By Asang Wankhede Copyright 2023
    222 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    222 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    222 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    This book examines the controversial 103rd Constitutional Amendment to the Indian Constitution that introduced an income and asset ownership-based new constitutional standard for determining backwardness marking a significant shift in the government’s social and public policy. It also analyses state level policies towards backwardness recognition of upper-caste dominant groups through case studies of Maharashtra, Haryana, and Gujarat. It provides an analytical and descriptive account of the proliferation of reservation policy in India and critiques these interventions to assess their implication on constitutional jurisprudence. Further, it assesses the theoretical and empirical challenges such developments pose to the principle of substantive equality and scope of affirmative action policies in Indian constitutional law and general discrimination law theory. The monograph shows how opening up of reservations for dominant upper-caste groups and general category will have implications for the constitutional commitment to addressing deeply entrenched marginalisation emanating from the traditional social hierarchy and the understanding of substantive equality in Indian Constitutional law. Further, it highlights key contradictions, incoherence, and internal tension in the design of the reservations for Economically Weaker Sections

    Critical, comprehensive, and cogently argued, this book will contribute and shape ongoing constitutional policy and judicial debates. It will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of law, Indian politics, affirmative action, social policy, and public policy.

    List of Cases. List of Statutes. List of other primary legal sources. 1. Introduction PART I: The EWS and Upper-castes reservations in India and their judicial treatment 2. The Legal History of Reservation for SC/STs, OBCs, EWS and Upper-Castes in India 3. Reservation for EWS and Upper-Castes in India 4. The Political context and Creamy Layer 5. Judicial treatment of Reservation for Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) and Upper-Castes in India Part II: The Post-2019 Regime, State Interventions, and Discrimination Law Theory 6. Aims, role and characteristics of substantive equality and affirmative action 7. Protected grounds, protected groups, demarcation of beneficiary classes and the extent of quota limit 8. Treatment of socio-economic/pure-economic disadvantages in discrimination law and Sociological meaning of class 9. Conclusion. Bibliography

    Biography

    Asang Wankhede is a future General Editor of Denning Law Review and is currently engaged with the Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal as an Associate Editor. He reads D.Phil in Law at the University of Oxford and holds MPhil in Law (Oxon.) and an LLM in International law (SOAS, London) where he read as a Felix Scholar and was awarded a Distinction. His areas of interest are Constitutional Law, Discrimination Law with focus on caste discrimination, International Law, Data Protection and Privacy Law and Intellectual Property Rights.

    Asang has also been actively involved in Dalit student politics to fight institutional caste-based segregation and discrimination in university spaces.