惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
A
About on SuperTechFans
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
V
Visual Studio Blog
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
B
Blog RSS Feed
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
GbyAI
GbyAI
美团技术团队
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
小众软件
小众软件
博客园 - Franky
罗磊的独立博客
The Cloudflare Blog
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
量子位
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
B
Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
P
Proofpoint News Feed
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Project Zero
Project Zero
Security Latest
Security Latest
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
I
Intezer
J
Java Code Geeks
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
P
Privacy International News Feed
月光博客
月光博客
A
Arctic Wolf
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
博客园_首页
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
T
Tor Project blog
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org

India’s National Fortnightly Magazine

SIR West Bengal Voter Exclusion Case 2026 TN Assembly Polls 2026: Senthil Balaji and SP Velumani Clash for Western Belt Supremacy Women’s Reservation Act Amendments Raise Delimitation Fears Healthcare’s Breaking Point India’s Elderly Boom: Care Gaps and Policy Failures AI chatbots fill mental health gaps in India, but risks grow Substandard Drugs in India: The Hidden Public Health Threat India Healthcare Costs Crisis: Who Pays the Price? ASHAs hold India’s fragile health system together but are woefully underpaid Occupational Health Crisis in India: Silicosis and Beyond Partha Chatterjee’s For a Just Republic and the Limits of the People-Nation India’s Missing Middle: Trapped Between Health Insurance and Care Hungary Election 2026: Orbán Defeated, Magyar Wins Big Shailaja Paik on Dalit Women, Caste, and the Politics of Erasure in India Free Speech Crackdown in India: Is Dissent Under Threat? Ambedkar Jayanti and the New Publicness of Protest Politics Implementing Women’s Reservation: Why a Hybrid 651-Seat Lok Sabha Model Outperforms Mass Expansion Ambedkar and Free Speech: Who Controls Dissent in 2026? How a Maharashtra Village Turned Tea with Dalits into a Statewide Equality Mission Women’s Reservation, Delimitation Bills Spark Secrecy Row Reforming Tamil Nadu's Local Governance: Why MLAs Aren't Fixers in 2026 Sewage, Neglect, and Governance Failure Mark India's Water Crisis West Bengal voter list controversy explained | Why names are being deleted Pattukkottai Kalyanasundaram: Tamil Cinema and Left Politics Delhi’s PM-UDAY Reset: Regularising Unauthorised Colonies on an “as is” Basis Will Vijay’s TVK disrupt DMK and AIADMK? | Tamil Nadu election 2026 Constitutional Morality vs Social Morality in India 2026 Amit Shah’s Anti-Conversion Promise Opens a New Faultline in Punjab Politics Why Indian Shias Protest for Iran: History of Solidarity (2026) West Bengal Voter List Row 2026: “Votercide” Debate The Hidden Ecosystem Inside our Homes Asha Bhosle’s Death Marks the End of an Era in Indian Playback Music Women’s Health in India: Inequality by Design How Algorithms Turn Feminism into a Marketable Aesthetic An Unanswered People: Adivasi Poetry’s Fight for Language and Land Rereading Kari in the Age of Identity Debates Absolute Jafar: Nostalgia and restlessness in frames Anita Nair’s Why I Killed My Husband Review: Powerful Themes, Uneven Storytelling Why the FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 Has Triggered a Political Storm Iran’s Staying Power Redraws the US-Israel War Calculus Snake Metaphors in Indian Politics 2026: Venomous Rhetoric From Grief to Politics: Porkodi Armstrong and the Battle for Dalit Power in North Chennai West Bengal election 2026: Will Babri Masjid split the Muslim vote? West Bengal Communal Politics and the 2026 Election Battle Raghav Chadha-AAP Rift Explained: Rise to Fallout (2026) Why India Is Not Energy-Secure Amid Global Oil Shocks Mulla Shah Mosque: Jahanara Begum's forgotten legacy Strait of Hormuz Ceasefire: Pause, Not Peace Dharavi’s Kumbharwada Potters fear Adani-led Redevelopment will Destroy their Livelihoods How India’s Poor Lose Years Waiting in Queues (2026) India IT Rules 2026: Threat to Free Speech? Iran War Ceasefire Signals a Shift Toward Multipolar Deterrence US Foreign Policy: Empire, Coups, and Control (2026) CBFC Ban on Gaza Film Raises New Alarm Over Censorship Queer Dalit identity and the limits of visibility 2026 Assembly Polls: Congress vs BJP Power Test Israel's Relentless Bombing Creates Displacement Crisis in Lebanon Iran War Ceasefire Marks End of US Dominance Era Imported Inflation in India: Navigating Gulf Crisis Kerala Assembly Election 2026: LDF Anti-Incumbency vs UDF Momentum Petronet LNG: A Public Company Built to Escape Public Accountability Gujarat Local Polls: AAP Rise Deepens Congress Crisis Who Defines You? | The Frontline Newsletter SIR controversy deepens fear of Muslim disenfranchisement in Bengal Kerala Election 2026: LDF, UDF, and the BJP “B Team” Charge Delhi’s LPG Crisis Exposes How Migrants Are Locked Out At 100, Krishnammal Jagannathan’s Life Marks a Legacy of Dalit Land Rights and Resistance Who will win Kerala Assembly Election 2026? LDF or UDF? Assam Polls: Cash Transfers Mask Stagnant Incomes and Job Distress Jaishankar and India's Diplomacy Crisis West Bengal SIR 2026: Voters Treated as Suspects Sathankulam Verdict: How a Rare Death Penalty Challenges India’s Custodial Torture Crisis How three 2026 bills redefine identity, marriage, and freedom in India After Nitish Kumar, Bihar BJP faces its biggest test: caste coalition without a ‘Mr Clean’ Nuclear Deterrence in South Asia: Fragile Stability Actor Vijay and Politics: An Emerging Landscape Dharavi’s Idli-Vada Economy Faces Disruption Under Redevelopment Child Marriage Annulment in India: Khushbu’s Fight (2026) India’s Role in Palestine: Why West Asia Peace Needs Action 2026 Rethinking Iran beyond Western narratives N Rangasamy’s 2026 Puducherry Poll Strategy and Power Play Khalid Jawed on Urdu’s Future and Cultural Loss (2026) Kashmir Encounter Killing Sparks AFSPA Debate 2026 Birds and grief in Hamnet and H is for Hawk GST Federalism Crisis 2026: How States Lost Fiscal Power US-Iran War 2026: Petrodollar Stakes Behind Hormuz Clash White Savior Complex in Arab Regimes Drives Ukraine Deals Not Self Reliance UPA Corruption Narrative vs Court Verdicts 2026 Mathur Sathya Case Exposes Patriarchy in Progressive Politics Personality Cult in Indian Politics 2026: Why Leaders Remain Untouchable India Needs a New Economic Model Beyond Neoliberalism Why J&K MLAs Are Fighting the Lieutenant Governor Over Security Pawar Family Rivalries Stall NCP Factions Merger in Maharashtra DMK manifesto 2026: Key promises, alliances, & welfare politics State Assembly Elections 2026: How Voter Dynamics Are Shaping India Iran-Israel War: Hegel’s Recognition Theory Explains the Escalation Coal, Capital, and Compliance: Fairmine Under NGT Lens Hindu Rashtra Debate: 2026 State Elections Test Secular India Tamil Nadu Election 2026: How Gender and Gen Z Voters are Reshaping the Dravidian Power Struggle Will NEET Break More Students Than It Makes Doctors?
Gujarat's proposed marriage registration amendment 2026 polices choice
Vitasta Kaul · 2026-03-02 · via India’s National Fortnightly Magazine

On February 20, Gujarat Deputy Chief Minister Harsh Sanghavi proposed an amendment to the Gujarat Registration of Marriages Act, 2006, introducing a stricter, multi-stage verification process. Couples seeking to register their marriage would be required to submit identity documents of their parents and declare that they have informed them about the marriage. Parents would then be officially notified within 10 working days after an application is accepted. Registration would take place only after at least 30 days, once the Registrar is satisfied that all requirements have been met.

Calling the proposal a matter of “public importance,” Sanghavi said the government was “not against love marriages” but was acting to protect “the dignity of girls and Sanatan Dharma.” He said the changes were necessary to prevent misuse of marriage laws by “anti-social elements”, particularly those who allegedly hide their identities to “trap daughters of Gujarat” in cases of so-called love jihad.

“If someone deceives a daughter of the State by hiding his identity, this government will ensure strict action,” Sanghavi said. “Today’s time demands a strong armour that needs to be created for young girls.”

The proposal has been opened for public suggestions for 30 days, after which a committee will review responses before the amendment is finalised. With nearly two-thirds of the population under the age of 35 in a country where interfaith and intercaste marriages often attract hostility, requiring parental involvement risks exposing couples, especially women, to familial pressure and violence, and could undermine the constitutional right of adults to choose their partners freely, legal experts say.

A constitutional fault line

The constitutional record on the right of adults to marry by choice is well established. Article 21 guarantees the protection of life and personal liberty, and courts have consistently interpreted this right to include the freedom to choose a partner without interference from either the state or the family. As such, the Gujarat proposal stands as a direct challenge to established constitutional principles.

Audrey D’Mello, advocate and director of the Majlis Legal Centre, said marriage is fundamentally a personal decision that cannot be treated as a matter requiring external approval or disclosure. “Once a person becomes an adult, all decisions rest with that individual. Your signature alone is required. No one else can give consent on your behalf,” she said. Even a requirement to inform parents, she said, could have serious consequences in the Indian social context, where family authority continues to shape decisions around marriage, particularly for women. In many cases, families strongly oppose intercaste and interfaith relationships, and disclosure can expose couples to coercion or violence.

“We understand the legal meaning of consent and adulthood, but in India there is still strong patriarchal control over women’s sexuality and over whom they marry,” she said. “If women who make independent choices are required to inform their parents, they may be put at grave risk. We have seen ‘honour killings’ and violent reactions from families.”

Suraj Singh’s father looks at photographs from Suraj and Neha Rathore’s Arya Samaj wedding. Neha was allegedly murdered by her father and brother in Greater Noida on March 12, 2025, after marrying outside her caste.

Suraj Singh’s father looks at photographs from Suraj and Neha Rathore’s Arya Samaj wedding. Neha was allegedly murdered by her father and brother in Greater Noida on March 12, 2025, after marrying outside her caste. | Photo Credit: Sabika Syed

D’Mello said the requirement also raises broader concerns about the increasing regulation of young people’s relationships in the name of protection. “What is particularly troubling is that these measures are justified as protecting women. The language often used refers to ‘love jihad’ and claims that Muslim men are targeting Hindu women. This framing assumes that women have no agency and no capacity to make decisions for themselves.”

Such policies, she said, reduce women to passive subjects rather than individuals capable of making choices.

She pointed to earlier debates around raising the age of consent from 16 to 18 in 2013, which she said were influenced by the belief that girls should not be sexually active before the legal age of marriage. “But young people continue to be sexually active and no law is going to change that,” she said. “We call ourselves a constitutional democracy with guaranteed rights but we still operate within narrow patriarchal norms.”

D’Mello warned that once such measures are introduced, they often become entrenched before they can be legally challenged. “It is worrying to see the direction in which things are going,” she said, noting especially the recent remarks by Justice B.V. Nagarathna cautioning against premarital physical relationships and observing that a man and a woman are “total strangers” before they are married. “When the higher judiciary can make such remarks, it is extremely concerning.”

The proposal also comes amid a wider climate of surveillance of young people’s relationships. Incidents of moral policing by vigilante groups such as Bajrang Dal around Valentine’s Day are an example of this.

Courts and the right to choose

Judicial precedent on the right of adults to marry by choice is consistent and extensive. In its 2021 decision in Laxmibai Chandaragi v. State of Karnataka, the Supreme Court reiterated that the consent of “the family or the community or the clan” is not necessary once two adults decide to marry. The Court described individual choice as inseparable from dignity and held that such choices cannot be subordinated to notions of “class honour” or collective social control.

Earlier decisions had articulated the same principle. In Shafin Jahan v K.M. Ashokan (2018), the Supreme Court upheld the right of an adult woman, Hadiya, to marry a person of her choice and to choose her religion, overturning a Kerala High Court judgment that had annulled an interfaith marriage by treating the woman as vulnerable and in need of protection.

In Lata Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh (2006), the Court recognised the family itself as a possible site of violence and affirmed the right of adults to enter intercaste marriages without interference.

High courts have followed this constitutional trajectory. The Delhi High Court in 2009 and the Allahabad High Court in 2021 struck down the mandatory 30-day public notice requirement under the Special Marriage Act, ruling that such disclosure violated privacy and exposed couples to risk.

Reality on the ground

Rights activist Lata Singh, whose case became a landmark ruling on intercaste marriages and who has long worked with couples facing familial opposition, said the Gujarat proposal runs contrary to Article 21 and to multiple Supreme Court rulings affirming the autonomy of adults.

“When do young people go to court? They go when they know their parents will not agree. That is exactly why they approach the courts,” she said. “If the state says parents must be involved, then the law says one thing and the state is doing something else.”

A coalition of organisations holds a candlelight vigil at Freedom Park in Bengaluru on December 26, 2025, protesting an honour killing in Hubbali earlier that month.

A coalition of organisations holds a candlelight vigil at Freedom Park in Bengaluru on December 26, 2025, protesting an honour killing in Hubbali earlier that month. | Photo Credit: SUDHAKARA JAIN

Singh also noted that legal protections, such as in the case of Shakti Vahini v. Union of India, which laid down guidelines to prevent honour-based violence, often exist only on paper, while enforcement on the ground remains inconsistent. Even when officials are aware of Supreme Court guidelines, she said, they frequently rely on personal judgment or social pressures while dealing with couples who have eloped.

Recalling a recent visit to a police station, Singh described seeing adult couples being detained at the insistence of families despite having married legally. Police officials justified such actions as a way to prevent violence from relatives, she said, illustrating how informal practices often override legal safeguards.

She added that interfaith marriages have become particularly difficult in recent years, especially in States with anti-conversion laws, including Gujarat. While the legal framework appears straightforward on paper, she said, bureaucratic procedures and social hostility create significant barriers for couples seeking to marry freely. “Our constitutional rights say one thing, but state actions say something else. No state should be above the law.”

Recent developments in Gujarat suggest the depth of social resistance to marriages by choice. In a recent gram sabha resolution passed in Nand village in Gujarat’s Kheda district, local authorities imposed a social boycott on couples who marry against their families’ wishes. Such couples were barred from community facilities, religious gatherings, and social functions—an indication of the social sanctions that often accompany marriages without parental approval.

For meaningful protection, Singh argued, young people must be made aware of their legal rights and that Supreme Court guidelines must be implemented more seriously by officials. She also called for “honour killing” to be recognised as a separate criminal offence.

Couples under pressure

Civil society organisations working with interfaith couples say the Gujarat proposal reflects broader patterns of social control. Asif Iqbal, co-founder of Dhanak of Humanity, an organisation providing socio-legal support to intercaste and interfaith couples, said the proposed parental-consent requirement marks a significant departure from the original purpose of marriage registration laws.

According to Iqbal, Gujarat already has the Compulsory Marriage Registration Rules, 2006, introduced in line with Supreme Court directions requiring the registration of all marriages. These rules were intended to bring religious marriages into a formal legal framework so that spouses, particularly women, would have documentary proof of marriage in cases of dispute or separation. Parental consent was never part of that framework, he said.

Iqbal said the new requirement is likely to have its greatest impact on interfaith marriages, which already face significant legal and procedural hurdles. The only clear statutory route available to interfaith couples is through the Special Marriage Act, a process he described as lengthy and often unsafe for couples facing family opposition.

Participants at a protest against alleged “love jihad” organised by Sakal Hindu Samaj at Shivaji Park in Dadar on January 29, 2023. Such campaigns form the ideological backdrop to Gujarat Deputy Chief Minister Harsh Sanghavi’s proposed amendment to the Gujarat Registration of Marriages Act, 2006, mandating parental notification.

Participants at a protest against alleged “love jihad” organised by Sakal Hindu Samaj at Shivaji Park in Dadar on January 29, 2023. Such campaigns form the ideological backdrop to Gujarat Deputy Chief Minister Harsh Sanghavi’s proposed amendment to the Gujarat Registration of Marriages Act, 2006, mandating parental notification. | Photo Credit: EMMANUAL YOGINI

“In crisis situations, once couples leave home, the first thing that comes to their mind is to get married quickly,” he said. Lawyers often advise couples to marry under religious law as a faster alternative, he added. This route has commonly been used by intercaste couples where both partners are Hindu. In some cases, interfaith couples also rely on religious ceremonies, including Arya Samaj marriages involving conversion, after which the marriage certificate is used for registration under State rules.

The parental-consent requirement, he said, could effectively close off these alternative routes. “The larger idea is to make things so difficult that couples cannot marry easily. If it were possible, they would even repeal the Special Marriage Act,” he said.

Iqbal said that while intercaste couples may sometimes find administrative workarounds because of relatively greater social acceptance, Hindu-Muslim marriages are likely to face stricter scrutiny. Even when marriage certificates do not explicitly record religion, identity documents often reveal religious backgrounds through parents’ names and other details.

This, he said, also exposes a broader contradiction between Supreme Court directives and State-level policies. In Shakti Vahini v. Union of India, the Supreme Court directed States to establish safe houses and provide protection to intercaste and interfaith couples facing threats to their lives and liberty. While some States such as Delhi and Maharashtra have functioning safe houses, implementation remains uneven, he said.

Gujarat itself has stated that it maintains a safe house for couples in Gandhinagar. “So on the one hand, the government says it is providing protection to couples, and on the other hand it is introducing rules that make marriages more difficult,” he said. “The contradiction is very clear.”

Iqbal said such measures reinforce the idea that marriages are acceptable only when families approve, leaving the family as the central authority over individual choice. “The family remains the main controlling institution both before and after marriage.”

Also Read | Emerging challenge to the Constitution

Also Read | Hannah Arendt explains India’s new normal