युक्ती हीने विचारे तु धर्महानि प्रजायते

Jhuma Sen

Bio-note

Professor Sen graduated from Symbiosis Law School, Pune in 2008, and later read for an LL.M at University of California at Berkeley as an American Association of University Women’s International Fellow. She joined the Chambers of Ms. Indira Jaising (Senior Advocate, Supreme Court of India and former Additional Solicitor General) before independently practicing before the Supreme Court, Delhi High Court and various Tribunals, appearing in a range of matters, from constitutional writ to civil, labour and employment and matrimonial disputes.

Jhuma is a Global Fellow at the Centre for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University. She has also been a Visiting Faculty at the National Law School of India University, Bangalore and the National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata and a Visiting/Research Fellow at Institute for Feminist Legal Studies, Osgoode Hall Law School (Canada), Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law (Spain), Cornell Law School (USA), Erik Castren Institute (Finland), National University of Singapore (Singapore).

In 2019, Jhuma received the Future of Change India Research Fellowship at University of New South Wales (2019) where she spent a term researching and writing on religious personal laws in the making of constitutional culture in India. The said research is part of her forthcoming book (tentatively titled Courting Family: Public Life of Private Laws) on the everyday life of “family law”in constituting public culture. Jhuma was an Asia 21 Young Leader in 2017 under the aegis of the Asia Society. In 2019, Jhuma was also offered the prestigious Eleanor Roosevelt Fellowship at the Human Rights Program in Harvard Law School (declined).

Jhuma has been a part of the Justice Verma Committee deliberations and has engaged with the National Human Rights Commission, National Commission for Women, the Law Commission of India, National Judicial Academy and the Supreme Court on several issues relating to access to justice, gender justice and the like.