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...
In this post, the authors introduce their paper "The Enduring Gaps and Errors in Capital Sentencing in India" published in the latest volume of the National Law School of India Review. They identify...
(Ed Note: Shaunna Rodrigues’ review is the fourth post in our blog’s round-table book discussion on Prof. Jeff Redding’s A Secular Need: Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary...
(Prof. Farzana Haniffa’s review is the third 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...
As part of our blog round-table book discussion on Prof. Jeff Redding’s A Secular Need: Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary India, this is the response by Arif A. Jamal.
Release of Volume II of the NLUD Journal of Legal Studies.
In this post, Prof. Dipika Jain responds to the response pieces written on her by Anirudh Burman, and Ritambhara Singh & Arun PS on her SLR-OUP article.
The students at The West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata (‘NUJS’) are pleased to announce the release of Issue 13(2) of the NUJS Law Review.
In his response piece , Neeraj highlights some of Rado’s key premises. He also adds additional perspectives, anecdotes, and a few references of his own. In doing so, he attempts to contextualise Robi...
In this piece, Mr. Robi Rado, introduces the arguments he makes in his paper titled “A Tale of India, Diaspora and Development” that has been published in the Issue 1 of the 2020 Volume of the Indian...