Socio-Legal Study on Educational Disparities in India: An Analytical Examination of Structural Inequities, Legislative Frameworks, and Reform Imperatives
Keywords:
Educational disparities, Right to Education, socio-legal analysis, caste and education, gender gap, constitutional law, IndiaAbstract
Educational disparities in India represent one of the most persistent and structurally embedded challenges within the nation's socio-legal landscape. Despite constitutional provisions guaranteeing the right to education and a robust statutory framework—culminating in the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009, and the National Education Policy, 2020—significant inequities continue to pervade the educational ecosystem across dimensions of caste, gender, religion, geography, and socioeconomic class. This paper undertakes a comprehensive socio-legal analysis of educational disparities in India, situating the problem within theoretical frameworks drawn from critical legal theory, constitutional jurisprudence, and sociological inquiry. Employing secondary data from Census 2011, ASER 2022, UDISE+ 2021-22, and National Sample Survey Office reports, the study maps literacy differentials, enrolment ratios, dropout rates, and infrastructure deficits across diverse demographic categories. The paper identifies structural drivers of disparity including economic deprivation, patriarchal norms, caste-based exclusion, and inadequate implementation of constitutional mandates. The analysis reveals that while legislative intent has been progressive, implementation gaps and resource deficits continue to undermine educational equity. The paper concludes with actionable socio-legal recommendations directed at policymakers, judicial bodies, and civil society organisations.
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