Unfinished Equality
Unfinished Equality
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More than half a decade after decriminalization, queer people in India continue to live in a climate of exclusion and fear. Family rejection, workplace discrimination, police harassment, and unequal access to healthcare and education remain everyday realities. Even as court victories and policy reforms have created a framework of recognition, that framework remains fragile, and the promise of equality is far from realized.
In this powerful and deeply reflective book, veteran queer activist Pawan Dhall delves into the unfinished journey of queer rights in India. Moving between the 1980s and the present, he weaves personal memory, his own life story, archival research, first-hand accounts, and informed analysis into a vivid narrative of survival and resistance—where queer people forge spaces of belonging, solidarity and care. Crucially, Dhall argues that the push for marriage equality should not take precedence over securing robust anti-discrimination protections, a stance that recentres the priorities of the queer movement in India.
By emphasizing survival strategies, the importance of chosen families, and the courage of community collectives, Unfinished Equality insists that queer lives in India are not only marked by discrimination but also by the possibility of transformation. A vital contribution to queer archiving and storytelling, this book invites us to listen, reflect and reimagine what justice could mean.
'In an environment where the Transgender Amendment Act has already arrived and further rollbacks are entirely plausible, Unfinished Equality does something that policy briefs and petition drives cannot: it makes the stakes personal. It reminds us that the person asking “How many wars must you wage to be yourself?” is not speaking rhetorically. And it argues, with patience and considerable moral force, that the answer to that question depends not on the next courtroom verdict but on the unglamorous, incremental work of building a country where the question does not need to be asked at all.'—Sahil Pradhan, Local Samosa. Read the review here.
- ISBN: 9781803096605
- Pages: 262
- Size (inches): 6 x 9
- Format: Paperback
- Publication Year: April 2026
- Series: The Pride List
- Category: Gender Studies, Gay and Lesbian Studies, The Pride List and All Books in Print
If you are ordering from India, your order will be shipped from Seagull Books, Calcutta. Shipping is free for orders above ₹999. It takes a maximum of 7 working days your order to be delivered.
If you are ordering from the US or the UK or anywhere else in the world, your order will be shipped from the University of Chicago Press' distribution centre, Chicago.
Please note: For customers paying in currencies other than Indian rupee or US dollar, prices will be calculated according to the currency conversion rate at the time of purchase and may vary from the printed price.
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Seagull Books (estd 1982) has been crafting books with an eye to both exceptional content and radical design. What began highly risky business of publishing books-books on alternative cinema, philosophy, culture-continues to be a passionately felt need of the hour: manuscripts that need to see the light of day, instinctive and theatre, visual arts, to reach a readership, to stimulate minds, to change outlooks. Read More
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