Naz Foundation v. Govt. of NCT Delhi (India, 2009): Private Life, Sexual Minorities, and Constitutional Dignity
“Can the state regulate even what happens in a person’s bedroom?” This question changed the direction of constitutional rights.
The Naz Foundation judgment was not simply a dispute over one provision of criminal law. It squarely asked how far the state may control private life in the name of “morality,” and how a constitution must protect minority lives. For decades, Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code criminalised same-sex intimacy, and its very existence forced sexual minorities to live under stigma and fear. The Delhi High Court held that the Constitution exists not to enshrine majority sentiment, but to protect individual dignity, autonomy, and the private sphere. Below, I will organise Naz Foundation calmly, focusing on the “language of rights” and constitutional structure.
Table of Contents
Background and Section 377
Naz Foundation begins with Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code. Introduced in the nineteenth century during the colonial period, it criminalised “carnal intercourse against the order of nature.” The key problem was that this phrase was both extremely vague and, in practice, used to effectively criminalise consensual same-sex intimacy.
Naz Foundation, an NGO working on HIV/AIDS prevention, argued that Section 377 pushed sexual minorities underground, undermined public health outreach, and structurally enabled violence, blackmail, and discrimination. Crucially, the petition was framed not around whether prosecutions were frequent, but whether the very existence of the provision infringed fundamental rights by creating stigma, fear, and vulnerability as a matter of legal architecture.
Constitutional rights at issue
The Delhi High Court treated the case not as a narrow question of criminal law, but as a conflict of constitutional rights. The central issue was whether Section 377 infringed multiple rights simultaneously and structurally.
| Provision | Protected interest | Mode of infringement |
|---|---|---|
| Article 14 | Equality and non-arbitrariness | Arbitrary discrimination without a rational classification |
| Article 15 | Non-discrimination | Indirect discrimination tied to sexual orientation |
| Article 21 | Life, liberty, dignity | Intrusion into privacy and personal autonomy |
Delhi High Court’s core reasoning
- Criminalising consensual private intimacy between adults violates Article 21
- Section 377 operates arbitrarily and discriminatorily, violating Article 14
- “Public morality” and majoritarian discomfort cannot justify restrictions on fundamental rights
The judgment made its constitutional position unmistakable: what the Constitution protects is not “majoritarian morality,” but minority dignity and freedom.
Privacy, dignity, and autonomy
One of Naz Foundation’s most influential moves was to bring “privacy” to the front as an independent constitutional value. The Delhi High Court treated sexual orientation and intimate choice as core aspects of identity and held that they belong to a protected sphere of intimate life beyond state intrusion. In that framing, consensual adult intimacy is not a matter of public morality, but a matter of constitutional liberty.
The Court also centred “dignity” within Article 21. It reasoned that Section 377, regardless of actual prosecution rates, branded sexual minorities as potential criminals and forced fear, self-censorship, and social vulnerability across everyday life. That condition was not treated as mere inconvenience, but as a direct infringement of the right to live with human dignity.
Impact and later developments
| Stage | Legal development |
|---|---|
| 2009 | Delhi High Court limits the operation of Section 377 for consensual same-sex intimacy between adults in private |
| 2013 | Supreme Court (Koushal) reverses Naz |
| 2018 | Navtej Singh Johar restores Naz’s core constitutional logic in stronger form |
Although Naz Foundation faced a major setback in 2013, its reasoning did not disappear. In 2018, the Supreme Court revived and deepened the language of dignity, privacy, and constitutional protection of minorities that Naz had articulated, effectively re-establishing its approach as a constitutional baseline.
Practical summary points
- Section 377 → its very existence can infringe fundamental rights through stigma and structural harm
- Article 21 → life and liberty + dignity and privacy
- Morality arguments → not a constitutional standard for restricting rights
If you connect these points cleanly, Naz Foundation can be presented as a foundational case in India’s constitutional rights narrative for sexual minorities.
Naz Foundation: Frequently Asked Questions
The constitutional question Naz Foundation left behind
If you look only at outcomes, Naz Foundation may be described as “a judgment that was once reversed.” But its real constitutional importance lies elsewhere: it articulated, with unusual clarity, what standards a constitution should use when it evaluates rights. The Delhi High Court rejected moral discomfort as a legal metric and instead placed dignity and the private sphere at the centre of constitutional adjudication. That move fundamentally shifted the coordinates of rights reasoning in India.
Equally important was its method: it asked not simply whether a law was frequently enforced, but whether the law’s presence made certain lives practically impossible by producing stigma and fear. That approach later re-emerged, in stronger form, in the 2018 Supreme Court decision, and Naz Foundation remains the foundational reference point for that trajectory.
Naz Foundation therefore still poses a live constitutional question: does a constitution exist to keep the majority comfortable, or to make it possible for minorities to live with dignity? It is repeatedly cited because it confronted that question directly.




