RIGHT TO SPEEDY TRIAL: A CRITICAL STUDY
AUTHOR – GANESH SHRIRANG NALE (SATARKAR), LL.M STUDENT AT DEPARTMENT OF LAW, SHIVAJI UNIVERSITY, KOLHAPUR
BEST CITATION – GANESH SHRIRANG NALE, RIGHT TO SPEEDY TRIAL: A CRITICAL STUDY, INDIAN JOURNAL OF LEGAL REVIEW (IJLR), 5 (13) OF 2025, PG. 678-685, APIS – 3920 – 0001 & ISSN – 2583-2344
Abstract
The right to a speedy trial constitutes one of the most indispensable guarantees within modern constitutional democracies, anchoring the principles of fairness, due process, and human dignity. Although not expressly enumerated in the Constitution of India, the Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed that the right to a speedy trial is inherent in Article 21, which safeguards life and personal liberty. This dissertation undertakes an advanced, comprehensive, and critical study of the right to a speedy trial in India by examining its historical foundations, constitutional evolution, judicial development, statutory mechanisms, comparative perspectives, and systemic impediments.
The research situates the right to a speedy trial within a broader theoretical framework of procedural justice, natural justice, and human rights jurisprudence. It demonstrates that the ideals of immediacy, fairness, and judicial efficiency have deep roots in ancient Indian legal culture, including the Vedic, Smriti, and classical periods, where prompt adjudication was considered integral to Dharma and Nyaya. The dissertation further analyzes the significant transitions introduced during the colonial era and their continuing influence on contemporary legal structures.
A central focus of the study is the expansive interpretation of Article 21 by the Supreme Court in landmark cases such as Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar, A.R. Antulay v. R.S. Nayak, and P. Ramachandra Rao v. State of Karnataka, which transformed the right to a speedy trial into a constitutional imperative. These judicial decisions expose structural deficiencies within the criminal justice system, including judicial vacancies, infrastructural inadequacies, procedural complexities, investigative delays, and administrative shortcomings.
The dissertation also employs a comparative methodology, examining speedy trial jurisprudence from jurisdictions such as the United States, Kenya, Zimbabwe, and select states like California and Florida. This comparison highlights both the strengths and deficits of the Indian model, revealing how statutory timelines, prosecutorial accountability, and judicial management systems significantly reduce delays elsewhere.
The research ultimately identifies systemic obstacles that continue to compromise the efficient delivery of justice in India, such as enormous case pendency, under-resourced courts, delays in forensic reporting, weak prosecution, and misuse of procedural adjournments. It evaluates reform initiatives such as Fast Track Courts, Lok Adalats, e-Courts, and amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code.
The dissertation concludes by asserting that the right to a speedy trial is essential not only for the accused but for victims, society, and the integrity of the justice system. Without structural transformation, technological modernization, strengthened judicial capacity, and coordinated reform of the police and prosecution, the constitutional promise of timely justice will remain unrealized.
Keywords – Speedy trial; Article 21; Criminal justice system; Judicial delay; Fair trial; Human rights; Natural justice; Pendency; Constitutional law; Due process; Procedural justice; Legal reform; Fast Track Courts; Case management; Undertrial prisoners; Comparative jurisprudence; Indian judiciary; Investigative delay; Judicial efficiency; Access to justice.