Equality Times is a modern public legal education and rights-awareness platform. We explain constitutional issues, track injustices, and publish accessible, research-based content to strengthen civic engagement.
Professional, public-interest legal content — written for real people.
Equality Times is a public legal education and rights-awareness platform. We document and explain issues affecting marginalized and underrepresented communities with a focus on constitutional values — equality, dignity, and justice.
We do not treat law as elite knowledge. We simplify complex legal issues, highlight ground realities, and connect events to constitutional duties, institutions, and accountability.
We prioritize rights, justice, and constitutional morality over noise and sensationalism.
We focus on clarity, sources, and structured explanations that help people understand the “why.”
We amplify voices that are often excluded — and present issues with dignity and context.
Key themes we cover consistently.
Articles, rights, constitutional structure, and how the law impacts daily life.
Article 14–15 values, discrimination patterns, and the legal meaning of equality.
Awareness, protections, procedures, and the real-world challenges in implementation.
Justice systems, institutions, liberty, dignity, and rights-based public policy.
Digital rights, cyber safety, privacy awareness, and emerging legal questions.
Plain-language explainers and structured notes for learners and first-generation students.
How we publish and what you can expect.
Through informative and investigative content, we highlight issues that are underreported, explain legal context, and encourage rights-awareness. Our goal is to help people understand their rights and the responsibilities of institutions.
If you have a case, issue, or story that needs legal explanation, you can reach out. We also welcome collaborators who care about justice and public legal education.
Simple language, structured sections, and careful framing — without losing seriousness.
We connect issues to institutions, procedures, legal duties, and constitutional principles.
We avoid sensationalism. We present marginalized communities with dignity and context.