Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, chapter 7, is titled Legitimacy of Courts and the Dilemma of their Proliferation: the Significance of Judicial Power in India.https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facbooks/1044/thumbnail.jp
This paper emphasizes the role of the Courts in lending currency to the politics of Hindutva in the ...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
<p>-The Constitution of a country is the most fundamental law of the land. It is enacted for the<br>...
Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, chapter 7, is titled Legitimacy of Courts and the Dilemma of ...
Judicial activism through a process known as public interest litigation (PIL) has emerged as a power...
Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, chapter 3, is titled Lok Adalats and Legal Rights in Modern I...
For economic and nuclear reasons, India has received considerable attention over the last decade f...
The Indian Supreme Court has invited a great deal of interest for its alleged activism and the role ...
Judiciary is the important organ of each Government in modern age. Every constitution gives the vast...
This study analyzes the role the Supreme Court of India has tried to carve for itself in the Indian ...
This article analyses the emergence and practice of public interest litigation in India; it is an im...
DOI: 10.1002/9781444390599.ch19International audienceAlthough law courts in India still carry charac...
The Indian Supreme Court was established nearly seventy-five years ago as a core part of India\u27s ...
As a nation of over one billion people and the world’s largest democracy, India is sometimes confron...
Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, co-written with Viplav Sharma, is titled Exceptional or Not? ...
This paper emphasizes the role of the Courts in lending currency to the politics of Hindutva in the ...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
<p>-The Constitution of a country is the most fundamental law of the land. It is enacted for the<br>...
Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, chapter 7, is titled Legitimacy of Courts and the Dilemma of ...
Judicial activism through a process known as public interest litigation (PIL) has emerged as a power...
Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, chapter 3, is titled Lok Adalats and Legal Rights in Modern I...
For economic and nuclear reasons, India has received considerable attention over the last decade f...
The Indian Supreme Court has invited a great deal of interest for its alleged activism and the role ...
Judiciary is the important organ of each Government in modern age. Every constitution gives the vast...
This study analyzes the role the Supreme Court of India has tried to carve for itself in the Indian ...
This article analyses the emergence and practice of public interest litigation in India; it is an im...
DOI: 10.1002/9781444390599.ch19International audienceAlthough law courts in India still carry charac...
The Indian Supreme Court was established nearly seventy-five years ago as a core part of India\u27s ...
As a nation of over one billion people and the world’s largest democracy, India is sometimes confron...
Professor Krishnan\u27s contribution, co-written with Viplav Sharma, is titled Exceptional or Not? ...
This paper emphasizes the role of the Courts in lending currency to the politics of Hindutva in the ...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
<p>-The Constitution of a country is the most fundamental law of the land. It is enacted for the<br>...