A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case

The December 16, 2012 gang rape case in India’s capital ignited fierce discussion on women’s rights, safety measures as well as the punishment for the rapists. A major question stemming from this case and elaborated in this paper is: is capital punishment for a rapist an effective measure, as a form...

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Main Author: Samra Irfan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2021-01-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies
Subjects:
law
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-cultural-studies/volume-6-special-issue/article-7/
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spelling doaj-2121171dbdb347fd88b8a8deac8dd9062021-02-25T08:21:42ZengThe International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies2187-49052021-01-016SI9110410.22492/ijcs.6.SI.07A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape CaseSamra Irfan0National University of SingaporeThe December 16, 2012 gang rape case in India’s capital ignited fierce discussion on women’s rights, safety measures as well as the punishment for the rapists. A major question stemming from this case and elaborated in this paper is: is capital punishment for a rapist an effective measure, as a form of “justice” for the victim? The paper concludes that capital punishment should be abolished even for gruesome crimes like rape and it further raises the question whether capital punishment can serve as a reform tool for the existing and oftentimes dysfunctional criminal system in India. Through a thorough analysis of Mukesh & Another Vs State of NCT of Delhi and others (known as the Nirbhaya gang rape case), the paper explores capital punishment for the rapist from a socio-legal and cultural perspective. The case particularly becomes important as, along with other issues, it is concerned with the question of rights of the victim vis-à-vis the rights of the offender. In other words, the paper delves deeper into the conflict between the victims’ interests and the right of the offender in the justice system by examining who is responsible for what and to what extent. Taking a human rights approach, the paper examines the human rights jurisprudence in India as well as in international laws. Further, it maps the social and historical perspective revolving around rape victimhood and gender along with arguments that have been predominant for and against capital punishment, particularly for rapists in an Indian context.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-cultural-studies/volume-6-special-issue/article-7/capital punishmentculturegang rapegenderindialawjusticenirbahaya
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samra Irfan
spellingShingle Samra Irfan
A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case
IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies
capital punishment
culture
gang rape
gender
india
law
justice
nirbahaya
author_facet Samra Irfan
author_sort Samra Irfan
title A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case
title_short A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case
title_full A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case
title_fullStr A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case
title_full_unstemmed A Quest for “Justice” in Capital Punishment: A Socio-Legal Study of the Nirbhaya Gangrape Case
title_sort quest for “justice” in capital punishment: a socio-legal study of the nirbhaya gangrape case
publisher The International Academic Forum
series IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies
issn 2187-4905
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The December 16, 2012 gang rape case in India’s capital ignited fierce discussion on women’s rights, safety measures as well as the punishment for the rapists. A major question stemming from this case and elaborated in this paper is: is capital punishment for a rapist an effective measure, as a form of “justice” for the victim? The paper concludes that capital punishment should be abolished even for gruesome crimes like rape and it further raises the question whether capital punishment can serve as a reform tool for the existing and oftentimes dysfunctional criminal system in India. Through a thorough analysis of Mukesh & Another Vs State of NCT of Delhi and others (known as the Nirbhaya gang rape case), the paper explores capital punishment for the rapist from a socio-legal and cultural perspective. The case particularly becomes important as, along with other issues, it is concerned with the question of rights of the victim vis-à-vis the rights of the offender. In other words, the paper delves deeper into the conflict between the victims’ interests and the right of the offender in the justice system by examining who is responsible for what and to what extent. Taking a human rights approach, the paper examines the human rights jurisprudence in India as well as in international laws. Further, it maps the social and historical perspective revolving around rape victimhood and gender along with arguments that have been predominant for and against capital punishment, particularly for rapists in an Indian context.
topic capital punishment
culture
gang rape
gender
india
law
justice
nirbahaya
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-cultural-studies/volume-6-special-issue/article-7/
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