India approves Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill
Change
India gave presidential assent on March 30, 2026 to the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026, which narrows the statutory definition of transgender to specified medical and socio‑cultural categories and excludes recognition based solely on sexual orientation or self-perceived identities.
Why it matters
Government agencies and adjudicators must now apply the amended, medically and socio‑culturally grounded definition rather than accepting self-declared gender, raising the evidentiary bar for legal recognition. Public service and welfare schemes that previously accepted self-identification will face new verification requirements and legal uncertainty when determining eligibility.
Implications
- — Identity registrars and welfare department officials must update application, verification and certification procedures to reflect the amended definition or risk processing invalid or non-compliant registrations.
- — Legal aid clinics and lawyers representing transgender individuals must revise litigation and administrative strategies to address the amended statutory definition or their clients' claims may be dismissed under the new law.
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