
Caste out : Research shows lower courts in India to be free of gender and religious bias, but the effects of caste must be studied
Research shows lower courts in India to be free of gender and religious bias, but the effects of caste must be studied

In-built bias can be difficult to pin down. The researchers did not use caste or income as variables in the study because they do not have the appropriate algorithms to assess these. But government data for 2019 show that Dalits and Muslims make up the majority of undertrial prisoners in India. Representation now works the other way: scheduled castes are 16.6 per cent of the population, yet they make up 21 per cent of undertrial prisoners. It is the same for tribal people and Muslims. An Indian study from 2016 showed that, of 385 persons on death row at the time, two-thirds were from backward classes or castes or religious minorities, as were all 12 female convicts.
These figures are a clue to the complicated nature of systemic biases. Although the Development Data Lab study examined religious and gender biases related to conviction, acquittal and processes such as delay or change of judges, it did not consider the framing of charges, bail practices or severity of punishment. This may partly account for the fact that the religious minority was over-represented among undertrial prisoners in 2019 and on death row in 2016. Besides, caste bias is obviously present at some point in the process, but this cannot be separated fully from financial status and the disadvantages that go with low or uncertain incomes. Education, understanding of rights, social contacts, the ability to pay bail as well as other factors are tied up with caste, tribe and religion. It must also be asked how far local politics plays a part. The US-based study has just touched the tip of a submerged iceberg.
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