Punishment without Prison: Can India Reimagine Criminal Justice Beyond Incarceration?
Divya SoniJul 5, 202610.5281/zenodo.2076142623 pages
Currently, the Indian criminal justice system faces a serious issue with incarceration. The occupancy of prisoners is 573,220 in places built to accommodate only 425,609 inmates, and undertrials are 75.8% of the total prison population. This indicates that the current imprisonment-focused approach to punishment has failed in several aspects such as rehabilitation, deterrence, and public safety. The following paper will provide an assessment of India's ability and need to re-evaluate its criminal justice system beyond relying on incarceration as the primary means to address crimes. Through employing a doctrinal, comparative, and socio-legal research method, the discussion will look at theories underlying non-penal punishment. The study will examine the legal obligations that can be gleaned from Article 14 and Article 21 of the Constitution of India, taking into consideration the lack of use of present non-institutional measures under the Probation of Offenders Act 1958 and the newly passed Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023. Furthermore, the following paper will discuss relevant court rulings such as Hussainara Khatoon v Home Secretary, State of Bihar, Arnesh Kumar v State of Bihar, and Bachan Singh v State of Punjab. With reference to comparative case examples of Norway, New Zealand, Japan, and South Africa, this essay provides an overview of various alternatives to incarceration across the globe, ranging from community-focused and restorative justice initiatives to forms of supervised probation. The primary claim put forward by this analysis is that the overrepresentation of marginalized groups in India’s prison system, alongside the social and economic implications of incarceration, and the inherent constitutional right to human dignity combine to demonstrate that criminal penal reform is not only imperative but also mandatory in India. In terms of specific policy recommendations, these include a comprehensive Sentencing Code, an overhaul of probation services, a National Restorative Justice Model, the establishment of open prisons, and reforms to the existing system of bail. At the center of the core thesis is the notion that punishment, in a democratic constitutional state, should primarily aim at achieving accountability and restorative justice.