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Horizontal Discrimination and Article 15(2) of the Indian Constitution: A Transformative Approach
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 May 2016
Abstract
This article explores horizontal non-discrimination rights under the Constitution of India (Indian Constitution). The Indian Constitution is unique in that it expressly prohibits private discrimination on the grounds of sex, race, caste, religion, etc. for the purpose of, inter alia, “access to … shops” (Article 15(2)). The article argues that a historically grounded understanding of the word “shops”, in the context of the transformative purposes of the Indian Constitution, necessitates a broad reading that covers all private economic transactions where goods and services are offered to the public at large. Furthermore, seemingly contrary Supreme Court precedent, if it is constitutionally justifiable, must be restricted to its own facts. In sum, Article 15(2) of the Indian Constitution provides a radical constitutional remedy that is directly horizontally applicable to private conduct, and goes far beyond remedies developed in other jurisdictions, which have often needed to turn to legislation in order to adequately combat private discrimination in the economic and social sphere.
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Footnotes
BCL, MPhil (University of Oxford), LLM (Yale Law School). Visiting Faculty, West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata, India. I thank Tarunabh Khaitan, Jawahar Raja, Krishnaprasad KV, V Niranjan, Christopher McConnachie, Malavika Prasad, and Shreya Atrey, for helpful discussions on various aspects of this article. I am also grateful to the organizers and participants at the Discrimination Workshop at the National Law School of India University in December 2014, and the organizers and participants of the Public Law Conference at the National Law University, Delhi in April 2015, where earlier drafts of this paper were presented and discussed. Lastly, thanks are due to two anonymous peer reviewers, whose acute comments greatly helped in sharpening the arguments of this article.
References
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2. E.g., the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and United Kingdom Equality and Human Rights Commission.
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44. Article 15(1) of the Constitution prohibits the State from discriminating against citizens on grounds of, inter alia, caste. The framers’ preoccupation with caste is reflected in other parts of the Constitution as well. Article 17 prohibits “untouchability”, the most invidious avatar of caste-based discrimination. Article 25(2)(b) carves out an exception to the principle of religious freedom by allowing the State to make laws that compel Hindu temples to admit entry to all “sections” of Hindus.
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54. These limits are restricted to the sovereignty and integrity of India, public order, and morality. Constitution of India 1949 , art 19(4).
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56. See e.g. NAACP v Patterson 357 US 449 (1958).
57. See e.g. State of Madras v VG Row AIR 1952 SC 196.
58. Zoroastrian Cooperative, supra note 39 at para 29.
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60. Constitution of India 1949 , art 29.
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62. Ibid.
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68. Constitution of India 1949 art 15(2).
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71. All these definitions may be found in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, online: Merriam-Webster <http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shop>.
72. I thank Krishnaprasad KV for pushing me to ensure greater clarity on this point.
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Let us now reverse the hypothetical. Ashamed and mortified by her act, Odette is asked by a friend, “what did you do last night?”, to which she replies: “I slept with Duke. I’m utterly ashamed. I vow I’ll never do that again.” Now, a few months later, Swann is away, and at a house-warming, Odette finds herself attracted to Marcel. She says to herself, “Well, all I did was vow never to sleep with Duke again. But this is Marcel. So my vow remains unbroken.” Nobody will accept this reasoning. This is because if Odette’s vow is to make any sense, it must be understood as expressing some kind of principle. Odette made her promise because she saw something wrong in what she had done, and the wrongness of the act – sleeping with Duke – lay not in it being Duke, or a man with blue eyes, but her breach of Swann’s trust. Thus, although her vow was framed in specific language, as an immediate response to a situation, its reach was not so. Again, the core idea is that we take Odette’s vow to be grounded in reason – and embodying a principle. And to understand what the principle is, we must study the context and circumstances in which her vow, or commitment, was made. This shows that in certain situations, history tells us that a principle framed in concrete terms nonetheless has broader applications that go beyond the specific context in which it was framed.
77. Parliament of India, Constituent Assembly Debates – Vol VII (29 November 1948), online: Parliament of India <http://parliamentofindia.nic.in/ls/debates/vol7p15.htm>.
78. Ibid.
79. Ibid [emphasis added].
80. Ibid.
81. Ibid.
82. Parliament of India, Constituent Assembly Debates – Vol XI (22 November 1949), online: Parliament of India <http://parliamentofindia.nic.in/ls/debates/v11p8m.htm>.
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109. Ibid, art 25(2)(b).
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111. Ibid at para 20.
112. Constitution of India 1949, art 15(2)(a).
113. Ibid , art 15(2)(b).
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