‘Systemic discrimination against women legal professionals continues’: AILAJ demands gender justice in India's legal profession
In a statement released on International Women's Day 2026, the All-India Lawyers' Association for Justice lays bare the exclusion of women from the bar and bench, and argues that correcting it is a matter of constitutional duty.
S. Bala Yamini
10 March 2026

ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY 2026, the All-India Lawyers' Association for Justice (‘AILAJ’) published a statement titled ‘Taking Gender Justice in the Legal Profession Seriously’. The statement presented the abysmal picture of women’s standing in the Indian legal profession by drawing on official data from the Supreme Court and from Bar Councils across fifteen states. It argues that improvement will require structural change.
The statement arrives at a moment of apparent optimism. Justice B.V. Nagarathna is ever-closer to becoming the first female Chief Justice of India; more women are enrolling in law programmes than at any previous point in the country's history; and the language of gender equality is frequently invoked in bar association speeches and judicial decisions. And yet, the numbers tell a different story.
The Bar Council does not have a single woman member in its governing body. Of 441 elected positions across state bar councils nationally, only 9, a mere 2.04 per cent, are held by women.
The numbers
According to data compiled from Bar Councils across fifteen states, 2,84,507 women advocates were registered in India as of 2023, just 15 per cent of the total. The composition of the courts follows a similar pattern. Women occupy 36.3 per cent of positions in the district judiciary, according to Supreme Court data. At the High Court level, only 14 per cent of judges are women. At the Supreme Court, the numbers are smaller still. Since Justice Fathima Beevi became the Supreme Court's first woman judge in 1989, only ten other women have served on the bench in the thirty-six years since.
The governance of the Bar Council of India tells the same story. The Bar Council, a statutory body responsible for regulating the legal profession and legal education across the country, does not have a single woman member in its governing body. Of 441 elected positions across state bar councils nationally, only 9, a mere 2.04 per cent, are held by women.
The causes
The statement identifies several interlocking causes for the persistence of gender inequality in the legal profession. The absence of institutional financial support, denial of reservation, lack of women on judicial panels, deep-rooted stereotypes, and gender blindness.