Published on : 22 Oct 2025, 11:02 am 3 min read

In this series of articles, XKDR will demonstrate how litigants and lawyers can benefit from augmenting their experience of courts with the objectivity that data can provide.

India's courts are notoriously slow, unpredictable and expensive. We've known this for decades.

The Justice Rankin Committee flagged these issues in 1924 and successive Law Commissions , government initiatives and judicial reforms have tried to fix the problem - special courts and tribunals, alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, digitisation , more judges, more budgets.

But here’s what we rarely ask: Is any of this working?

Judicial metrics are usually reported and discussed from the viewpoint of the courts - workload pendency and case clearan

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