We often talk about India’s “giant leaps.” We celebrate our economic growth, our rising literacy rates, and the fact that more women than ever are breaking glass ceilings in corporate boardrooms and space missions. On paper, 2026 looks like a year of triumph.
But recently, the Supreme Court of India held up a mirror to our society, and the reflection was uncomfortable.
In a poignant judgment, a Bench of Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Nongmeikapam Kotiswar Singh highlighted a painful “paradox”: While our laws have evolved, our mindsets are often still stuck in the past.
More Than Just a Legal Issue
The case before the Court was a grim one—a man appealing his conviction for burning his wife to death. While the Court dismissed the appeal, the judges felt compelled to add a “postscript” to the judgment. They weren’t just talking about one crime; they were talking about a systemic failure.
The Court noted that despite decades of legal reforms, welfare schemes, and judicial interventions, domestic violence remains “widespread.” The numbers back this up: over 4.48 lakh crimes against women were recorded in 2023 alone, and dowry-related violence still claims more than 6,000 lives every year.
The “Invisible” Barrier: Patriarchy
The most striking part of the Court’s observation was the focus on patriarchy.
We often think of patriarchy as a big, abstract concept. But the Court described it as something much more intimate—it is the “authority within households” that remains overwhelmingly male. It is the social legitimacy that allows dowry to persist, even though it has been outlawed for over sixty years.
The Court’s message was clear: Legislative reforms can incentivize change, but they cannot force a transformation of the heart.
The Progress Paradox
Why is it that as education goes up, dowry demands don’t necessarily go down? Why is it that economic independence for women hasn’t always translated to safety at home?
The Court called this the “paradox of progress.”
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Macro-level: We see women in the workforce and leadership.
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Micro-level: In the privacy of many homes—especially in rural and semi-urban areas—the control over a woman’s body, her choices, and her very life remains under a patriarchal thumb.
Where Do We Go From Here?
This judgment is a wake-up call for all of us. It tells us that we cannot simply “law our way” out of gender-based violence.
A law can punish a criminal, but it cannot easily dismantle a “deeply entrenched social order.” That part is up to us. It happens in the way we raise our sons, the way we stop “normalizing” control in the name of tradition, and the way we refuse to give social legitimacy to practices like dowry.
The Supreme Court has done its part by lifting the veil on this reality. Now, the question remains: When will our social progress finally catch up with our legal ones?
Case : Shankar v State of Rajasthan
