Dr Jaivir Singh This is the third piece of LSPR’s Blog Symposium on ‘From Free to Fair Markets’. What is the book saying? I would like to begin by listing what I […]
Dr Jaivir Singh This is the third piece of LSPR’s Blog Symposium on ‘From Free to Fair Markets’. What is the book saying? I would like to begin by listing what I […]
Prerna Dhoop This is the second piece of LSPR’s Blog Symposium on ‘From Free to Fair Markets’. Professor Rosalind Dixon and Professor Richard Holden in a new book titled ‘From Free to […]
Editorial Note The equal protection framework under the Constitution has taken its most robust form in the manner of affirmative action specifically for socially and economically backward classes under Article 15(4) and […]
Debayan Bhattacharya Courts have been sharply split over whether the Hindu Code Bill applies to Scheduled Tribes that are ‘sufficiently Hinduized.’ This piece analyses such judicial decisions and argues that Section 2(2) of […]
Malhar Satav This piece examines the importance of global consensus to combat the Climate Crisis by arguing that the cost of inaction exceeds far more than the cost of immediate, intensive, and […]
Private Jails: Is it the Reform that India Needs? Suhana Z. and Binit Agrawal Justice KM Joseph, while hearing the petition in Gautam Navlakha v. NIA, remarked “There’s a study of prisons. […]
Saranya Ravindran This article is an analysis of the various stages involved in implementing a cap-and-trade system in light of the blueprint released by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency and the 2022 […]
Anay Mehrotra In the case of The National Restaurants Association of India v. Zomato and Bundl Technologies we relook at the digital re-applicability of existing competition law both Indian and international. This […]
The Law School Policy Review (LSPR) brings to your desk the Second Volume of its Fortnightly newsletter. This time, we take a look at the marital rape verdict, a political defection crisis, […]
Parv Tyagi All takings of private property have to satisfy the requirement of public use, lacking which the taking fails. However, the courts have been highly deferential to the requirement of public […]