Context:
- The debate around Uniform Civil Code (UCC) has gained momentum with legislative efforts in some States and ongoing discussions on its nationwide implementation.
- UCC aims to replace diverse personal laws governing marriage, divorce, inheritance, and adoption with a common set of laws applicable to all citizens.
Key Highlights:
Constitutional Provision
- Article 44 (Directive Principles of State Policy):
- Directs the State to endeavour to secure a Uniform Civil Code for citizens.
- Not justiciable, but serves as a guiding principle for governance.
Current Legal Framework (Personal Laws)
- India follows religion-based personal laws, such as:
- Hindu Law (Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists)
- Muslim Personal Law (Shariat)
- Christian and Parsi Laws
- These laws regulate family matters like marriage, divorce, succession, and maintenance.
Objective of UCC
- Ensure equality before law (Article 14).
- Promote gender justice and eliminate discriminatory practices.
- Strengthen national integration and unity.
Key Issues Addressed by UCC
- Gender Justice
- Removes discriminatory practices like:
- Unequal inheritance rights
- Polygamy (in certain personal laws)
- Promotes equal rights for women across communities.
- Legal Uniformity
- Establishes common civil laws for all citizens irrespective of religion.
- Simplifies legal system by reducing complexity of multiple personal laws.
- Secularism
- Aligns with the principle of secular governance, where the State treats all citizens equally.
- National Integration
- Reduces divisions based on religion and community-specific laws.
Concerns and Challenges
- Religious Freedom
- Article 25 guarantees freedom of religion.
- UCC may be seen as interference in religious practices and customs.
- Cultural Diversity
- India’s diversity makes it difficult to create a one-size-fits-all law.
- Minority Concerns
- Fear of majoritarian imposition on minority communities.
- Practical Implementation Issues
- Requires codification and harmonisation of various personal laws.
- Risk of social resistance and political polarisation.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Article 44: Directive for UCC under DPSP.
- Articles 25–28: Guarantee freedom of religion.
- Seventh Schedule:
- Personal laws fall under Concurrent List (Entry 5).
- Goa Civil Code:
- Only State in India with a uniform civil law system.
- Important Supreme Court Judgments:
- Shah Bano Case (1985) – Maintenance rights for Muslim women.
- Sarla Mudgal Case (1995) – Highlighted misuse of personal laws in marriage.
- Shayara Bano Case (2017) – Declared triple talaq unconstitutional.
- Law Commission Reports:
- Suggested reform of personal laws rather than immediate imposition of UCC.
Relevant Mains Points:
Arguments in Favour of UCC
- Promotes equality and uniformity in civil laws.
- Ensures gender justice and women empowerment.
- Strengthens secularism by separating religion from civil law.
- Simplifies legal procedures and reduces legal pluralism.
Arguments Against UCC
- May violate cultural and religious autonomy.
- Risk of alienating minority communities.
- Uniformity may ignore regional and cultural diversity.
Critical Analysis
- UCC should not be viewed merely as legal reform, but as a social transformation process.
- Requires balancing Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 21) with religious freedoms (Article 25).
- Gradual, consultative approach is essential to avoid social conflict.
Way Forward
- Adopt a phased and consultative approach involving all stakeholders.
- Focus on gender-just reforms within personal laws as an intermediate step.
- Ensure UCC is based on equality, justice, and inclusivity, not majoritarian principles.
- Promote awareness and consensus-building through public dialogue and Law Commission consultations.
- Learn from models like Goa Civil Code while adapting to national diversity.
UPSC Relevance
- GS II – Constitution, DPSP, Fundamental Rights, secularism.
- GS I – Indian society, diversity, social issues.
- Essay – Uniformity vs diversity, gender justice, secularism.
