Supreme Court Advocates for Greater Representation of Women in Judiciary by Reinstating Female Judicial Officer | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
News Today Logo

    Supreme Court Advocates for Greater Representation of Women in Judiciary by Reinstating Female Judicial Officer

    Posted 24 May 2025

    2 min read

    The lady judicial officer was removed by the Rajasthan High Court in 2020 for failing to disclose her earlier employment as a government teacher while applying for the civil judge’s post.

    • Also, the SC in Pinky Meena v. The High Court of Judicature for Rajasthan case underscored the underrepresentation of women in judiciary.

    The Supreme Court Observed that:

    • To holistically understand women’s effective participation in the Judiciary, it is important to look at three main phenomena: 
      • The entry of women into the legal profession; 
      • The retention of women and growth of their numbers in the profession; 
      • And the advancement of women, in numbers, to senior echelons of the profession.
    • Also, Greater Representation of Women in the Judiciary will
      • Improve the overall quality of decision-making & enable better responses to diverse social and individual contexts and experiences.
      • Shift gender stereotypes, thereby, change attitudes & perceptions about appropriate roles of men & women.
      • Pave the way for greater representation in other decision-making positions. E.g., In the legislative and executive branches of government.
      • Increase women’s willingness to seek justice and enforce their rights through the courts.

    Underrepresentation of Women in Judiciary

    • Supreme Court: Since its establishment in 1950, the SC has had only 11 women judges. In the last 75 years, there has been no Dalit or tribal woman judge in SC.
    • High Courts:
      • Only 13.4% of judges of High Court are women (State of the Judiciary report, 2023).
      • No state except Telangana and Sikkim has more than 30% women judges in High Courts (Indian Justice Report 2025).
      • Manipur, Meghalaya, Tripura, Patna and Uttarakhand High Courts have no women judges
    • Tags :
    • Women in Judiciary
    • Indian Justice Report 2025
    • Gender Stereotype
    Watch News Today
    Subscribe for Premium Features

    Quick Start

    Use our Quick Start guide to learn about everything this platform can do for you.
    Get Started