Calcutta High Court. Photo: Avrajyoti Mitra / Flickr
Calcutta High Court. Photo: Avrajyoti Mitra / Flickr

Crime and punishment

The Polis Project dissects India’s crime data.

Sumit Chaturvedi is an independent journalist and researcher. He writes on politics, economy and social issues, and blogs at OpinionTandoor.in.

Published on

As the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) in India belatedly published its crime-statistics reports for the year 2017 on 21 October 2019, the debate circled back around crime data and its categorisation. Even though NCRB had recorded data for newly introduced categories of mob lynching, and hate violence for its 2017 report, these statistics do not find a place in the final published document. The reason behind it, the Home Ministry states, is that the data has errors which need to be rectified.

Political Violence and Justice Lab, an initiative by the research and journalism organisation The Polis Project, has for over a year been undertaking an extensive exercise of building a database on incidents of collective violence which includes two or more perpetrators since the year 2000. This exercise aims to analyse the impact of hate and violence on Indian society and the effects of political violence on issues of justice. Violence Lab also recorded incidents of violence during the general elections of 2019, which included cases of violence near polling stations and elsewhere. Recently the initiative has also taken up the task of tabulating mass graves across the world since the beginning of the 20th century.

Loading content, please wait...
Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com