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Indian Judiciary - Guardian of Rights, Engine of Reform

English medium 197 words RRB Exam, Railway, Indian Railway NTPC
The Indian judiciary protects rights, interprets the Constitution, and resolves disputes; its role is pivotal. Landmark judgments have expanded freedoms, yet perennial problems persist: case backlogs, limited benches, and procedural delays. How can justice be delivered promptly, when dockets are clogged—sometimes for years? Access to justice remains unequal: rural citizens face distance, poor infrastructure, and low legal awareness (legal aid exists; uptake is inconsistent). Technology—e-filing, video hearings, digital case-maps—offers remedies; however, it also raises concerns about privacy, connectivity, and fairness. Are virtual hearings truly inclusive? Judicial independence must be preserved: transparent appointments, accountability, and ethical conduct strengthen public trust. At the same time, courts should respect separation of powers; overreach risks policy-making by the judiciary, which elected institutions should perform. Public Interest Litigation (PIL) has corrected wrongs and stimulated reform; yet, it must not substitute policy. Reforms should focus on manpower expansion, simplified procedures, and targeted digitisation—measures that are pragmatic, measurable, and people-centred. In short: the judiciary's integrity—its independence, efficiency, and accessibility—determines whether constitutional promises become lived realities; reform, therefore, is not optional, but imperative. Today, reformers ask: can India build a faster, fairer, and more transparent justice system—one that serves every citizen, without delay or discrimination?