In India Justice Report (IJR) 2022 the State of Karnataka has achieved the highest rank among the 18 large and mid-sized States with populations over one crore, as per the justice delivery specifically Police, Judiciary, Prisons, and Legal Aid.
The State of Tamil Nadu has ranked in second place and Telangana in Third. The State of Uttar Pradesh is at rank 18 which is the bottom.
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This report relies on total knowledge of 4 pillars of justice delivery specifically Police, Judiciary, Prisons, and Legal Aid.
The State of Gujarat has acquired the fourth place and Andhra Pradesh is at slot 5 as per the report which was launched on April 4 in New Delhi.
The report stated, “The list of Seven Small States with a population less than one crore each, was topped by Sikkim which was ranked second in 2020. Sikkim has been followed by Arunachal Pradesh which was at rank 5 in 2020 [2020 and Tripura is at rank three]. Tripura was at the rank one in 2020. In this list, the State of Goa is at rank Seven which is the lowest.” The India Justice Report (IJR) was initiated by Tata Trusts in 2019, and that is the third version.
The basis’s companions embody the Centre for Social Justice, Common Cause, Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, DAKSH, TISS-Prayas, Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy and How India Lives, IJR’s knowledge companion.
This report relies on 24-month quantitative analysis. The IJR 2022, just like the earlier two, has tracked the efficiency of States in capacitating their Justice delivery buildings to successfully ship mandated companies.
Based on the most recent official statistics, from authoritative authorities sources, the report brings collectively in any other case siloed knowledge on the 4 pillars of Justice delivery specifically Police, Judiciary, Prisons, and Legal Aid.
Each pillar was analysed by means of the prism of budgets, human sources, workload, range, infrastructure, and tendencies in opposition to the state’s personal declared requirements and benchmarks.
This third IJR additionally individually assesses the capability of the 25 State Human Rights Commissions in the nation.