Editorial Simplified: The Law of Happiness | GS – II

Relevance: GS Paper II (Development and Welfare)


Introduction

Happiness has come to be accepted as a goal of public policy. And this discourse has given a fillip to a new narrative where the interconnections between law, governance and happiness are being searched.


Why do these connections matter?

  • Experiences from several nations confirm that the countries with higher GDP and higher per capita income are not necessarily the happiest countries and there exists a link between the state of happiness and rule of law.
  • The World Happiness Report (WHRs), over the years, confirmed that people tend to have poor mental health, a low score of subjective well-being and poor perception about the governance and law and order, despite high income levels.

Link between law and happiness

  • Jeremy Bentham said the object of the law should be the maximum happiness of the maximum number.
  • Going by popular perceptions, laws and legal regimes are the distributors of unhappiness in many ways.

Happiness in India

  • The World Happiness Report (WHR) 2018, which ranked 156 countries, placed India at the 133rd place on the index of global happiness.
  • While India’s performance on this can be attributed to several factors, there’s no denying the fact that there is an intrinsic relationship between law and people’s happiness.
  • We have about 3.3 crore cases pending in various courts in the country. How does unhappiness emanate from these cases? Each case is not a mere number — it involves tension, anxiety and deprivation to all those associated with it. Inevitably, the criminal justice administration for these people is a source of unhappiness.
  • Moreover, not more than 30 per cent people approach the courts in India. There is a visible decline in civil litigation, which suggests that a large number of people in the country are living with unresolved conflicts. This too dents the state of happiness in general.
  • Besides poverty, unemployment and other issues of sustenance, the outlook on religion, gender, sexuality, etc. also determine the contentment of the governed. For example, in India, increasing incidents of cow vigilantism, communal and gender bigotry, ultimately make the society intolerant and dissatisfied.

Crime and happiness

  • Criminal justice has far-reaching consequences for the lives of people — it brings difficulties when it does not act, it causes turbulence when it does.
  • Millions of accused, victims, suspects, witnesses and others have poignant tales about the actions and inactions of the criminal justice administration.
  • The satisfaction level of people is far too low in this country when it comes to the police and courts.
  • Vesna Nikolic, a noted victimologist, says that making people happy is the best crime prevention.
  • The connection between crime and happiness is understandable from the experience of Bhutan, which introduced Gross National Happiness (GNH) as a measure of good governance. The data show that a great majority of the Bhutanese population are happy. Further, the crime rate in Bhutan is extremely low.
  • A negative correlation between crime/victimization and happiness is observed. Individuals living in nations with high crime rates are less happy and satisfied than individuals living in nations with a comparatively lower crime rate.

Rule of law and happiness

  • The countries scoring high on the Rule of Law Index, a measure used by the World Justice Project, are those who are higher on the index of happiness as well. Among these countries are Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway, the Netherlands and Austria.
  • The fact that happiness ought to be part of the agenda to improve rule of law, and vice versa, is a new thrust in the emerging policy discourse in many jurisdictions.
  • The institutionalization of a happiness framework as a measure of achievement for policy goals is now being debated. Madhya Pradesh has set up a Happiness Department to achieve such objectives.

Conclusion

It is probably time to change the narrative — to shift the discourse of policy making towards the larger satisfaction of the people with the public institutions they have to regularly approach for various purposes. It is, perhaps, time to turn the narrative of law, policy and development, towards building a happier society.


 

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