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Family courts in the prosperous, southern state of Kerala ruled on just over five divorces every hour in 2014 – 130 every day – more than any of the 12 Indian states that compile such data, according to government data.
Although India does not appear on the world divorce statistics records – a global divorce repository compiled by the University of Illinois, USA – because it lacks nationwide data, the volume of divorces handled by courts in Kerala and the other 11 states indicates that couples are more willing than ever to separate than stay – as tradition still demands – in bad marriages.
The number of divorces appears large in a nation where courts tend to be conservative in granting legal separation, but they may be a fraction of failing or failed marriages because many Indian women stay married despite abuse, as we later explain.
The data – in this March 2015 government reply to the Lok Sabha– is compiled from family courts in the 12 states and are inadequate to compare India’s divorce rates accurately with other countries or across states.
It is hard to estimate the divorce rate – calculated against the number of married people, not the general population, as is done with, say, crime and accident rates –because India does not maintain any divorce data. Most use the term “divorce rate” loosely in India, since the data does not reveal divorces, only cases before the courts.
What is clear is that divorce cases before family courts are steadily growing.
For the year 2014-15, almost every state reported more divorces awaiting court verdicts than that were settled in 2014, according to the government’s reply to Parliament.
However, none of the other 11 states – five of which are more populous – had more divorce cases than Kerala: 47,525 cases in 2014.
Maharashtra witnessed half as many divorces as Kerala, which has a population a third of that of Maharashtra.
Source: Lok Sabha
As we cautioned, it is hard to say why divorces are growing after analysing data from 12 of 36 states and union territories.
We did find that three of the top five states reporting divorces – Kerala, Maharashtra and Karnataka – have more literate women than the all-India average; women’s participation in the labour force in these states is also slightly higher than the all-India rate.
The correlations are not always evident.
For instance, female literacy in Madhya Pradesh – number three in divorce cases – is 6 percentage points lower than the national average and female labour force participation rate is equal to the national average.
In Haryana – number five in divorce cases – the female literacy rate is equal to the national average of 65 percent, but female workforce participation is 12 percentage points lower than the Indian average. The state is among the top five states for divorce cases because data is only from 12 states – Haryana had 80 percent fewer divorce cases than Kerala.
Women in India often remain in abusive marriages for a variety of reasons, including a lack of economic independence, poor knowledge of legal rights and family pressure.
Six of 10 men surveyed in India had admitted perpetrating violence against their wives at some point, IndiaSpend reported in November 2014, quoting an extensive study by the United Nations Population Fund and the International Center for Research on Women.
Clashing egos and differences in expectations are among reasons for divorces in cities, according to media reportage.
(This article has been published in arrangement with IndiaSpend.)
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