In this conclusion to our blog round-table book discussion, Prof. Jeffrey Redding writes a response to the reviews for A Secular Need: Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary India
This post by Rivka Weill is the second response in the international blog symposium on India and Global Decline in Democracies. In this post the author gives a Indian-Israeli perspective on the role...
We are hosting an international blog symposium on India and Global Decline in Democracies as a part of our New Scholarship initiative. This post is the first response piece by Professor Tom Daly.
In this post Shalini Iyengar responds to Deirdre N. Dlugoleski's article titled “Undoing historical injustice: the role of the Forest Rights Act and the Supreme Court in departing from colonial...
NUJS Law Review is pleased to announce the release of the Companion Special Issue 13(3) of the NUJS Law Review on their website.
This Response Piece is part of a series of posts indexed here discussing the public law themed articles featured in the recently released Issue 2 of the 2020 Volume of the Indian Law Review.
This is the third part of our New Scholarship Series. In this series we discuss public law themed articles featured in the recently released Issue 2 of the 2020 Volume of India Law Review. This post...
In this piece, Deirdre N. Dlugoleski introduces the arguments she makes in her research article titled “Undoing historical injustice: the role of the Forest Rights Act and the Supreme Court in...
In this post the authors discuss about the ‘due diligence’ obligation with a focus on its scope and its relationship with the intermediary guidelines issued under the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Shahrukh Alam’s review is the fifth post in our blog’s round-table book discussion on Prof. Jeff Redding’s A Secular Need: Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary India moderated by Prof...