India figures in the top 50 countries in the world for
an effective criminal justice system, according to a new study that
ranks countries on how the rule of law is experienced by citizens.
However, the study finds that it is among the worst performing countries when it comes to civil justice.
The
Rule of Law Index 2015, released by the U.S.-based World Justice
project on Tuesday June 02,2015, analyses 102 countries worldwide using a survey of
over a 1,000 respondents from three big cities, along with local legal
experts, in each country.
The data, collected in 2013, measures how the
rule of law is experienced in practical, everyday situations using 47
indicators across eight categories — constraints on government powers,
absence of corruption, open government, fundamental rights, order and
security, regulatory enforcement, civil justice, and criminal justice.
According
to the Index, India’s overall rule of law performance places it in the
third position out of six countries in the South Asian region, 10th out
of 25 among lower middle income countries, and 59th out of 102 countries
worldwide. The top overall performer in the WJP Rile of Law Index 2015
was Denmark while in the South Asia region, the top performer was Nepal.
India’s
performance for criminal justice places it at 44 rank globally, Number 1
in South Asia and number 4 among lower middle income countries. The
surveys analysed whether the criminal investigation and adjudication
system is effective, whether it was impartial and free of corruption and
whether the rights of the accused were protected.
In
stark contrast, the corresponding ranking in civil justice for India is
88 globally, third in South Asia and 19th among lower middle income
countries. The survey looked at accessibility to civil justice, which
inlcudes general awareness of available remedies, availability and
affordability of legal advice and representation, and absence of
excessive or unreasonable fees and hurdles. It also asks if the civil
justice system is free of discrimination and corruption and whether it
is subject to unreasonable delay.
Four dimensions
India
ranks high in the category of Open Government, placing it 37th globally
and at three among lower middle income countries. The open government
index uses four dimensions to measure government openness — publicised
laws and government data, right to information, civic participation and
complaint mechanisms.
The country performs worst
however, in the category of order and security, placing at 90 worldwide,
fourth in South Asia and 20 among lower middle income countries. The
measures used for this category are absence of crime; absence of civil
conflict, including terrorism and armed conflict; and absence of
violence as a socially acceptable means to redress personal grievances.
Driving
down India’s score are the perceptions of corruption, of the
effectiveness of the civil justice system, the regulatory enforcement
environment and the criminal justice system, all of which reflect that
less than half of the respondents showed faith in these systems’ ability
to deliver justice. India did comparatively better in people’s minds in
terms of government freedom
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