Since her 2015 divorce, Reena, a 35-year-old mother of three living in the slums of Dakshinpuri, Delhi, has been trying to make ends meet working as a maid. For her kids enrolled in a government school, a scheduled caste certificate is the key to schemes like scholarships, subsidised uniforms and schoolbooks. However, in the absence of a father, whose caste traditionally determines that of his children in most of India, Reena’s circumstances have trapped her in a vicious cycle. “The school authorities keep asking for my kids’ caste certificates. I filed an RTI on June 17, 2016 asking about the procedure of applying for a caste certificate in the absence of a father, and I am still waiting for an answer. Every time I go to their office, they tell me there’s something missing in the form, or ask me to go find out their father’s caste. It’s been nearly three years and I haven’t received a single response,” she says. The 2017 annual report of the Central Information Commission of India states that four out of every ten RTI requests are rejected on unknown grounds.