The Architecture of Erasure: How India's New Transgender Act Builds What It Claims to Dismantle (Part II)
The Architecture of Erasure To capture the imagination which the Act sets to project, it is our duty, then, to take time and ask ourselves what the nature of the polity it imagines would be. The Act provides a state that is inherently devoted to legibility. It assumes that citizens should be made intelligible to the state and, in a sense that is defined by the conceptual frame of the state; otherwise, they are not even recognized. This suggestion soaks in the bitter heritage
Aditi Anand & Anuja Chatterjee
Apr 28
The Architecture of Erasure: How India’s New Transgender Act Builds What It Claims to Dismantle (Part I)
India’s Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Act, 2026 appears to have absolutely neglected the interests of the people that it is supposedly made for. The Act’s own Statement of Objects and Reasons declares that the law “was and is not to protect each and every class of persons with various gender identities.” An Act, whose title contains the phrase Protection of Rights, announces in its own explanatory text the categories of people it has chosen not to prote
Aditi Anand & Anuja Chatterjee
Apr 28
The Architecture of Harm: Intermediaries and the Constitution
Introduction The harms arising from intermediary behaviour are often public in nature, yet remain insufficiently recognised. This is largely because such harms are frequently understood merely as the aggregations of private harms . However, this framing is both inadequate and limiting, as it obscures the need for remedies that go beyond conventional privacy protection. This concern can be better understood through an analogy. The ocean exists as a natural entity populated by
Dr. Nupur Chowdhury
Apr 17