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- A Case Study of Teitiota v. New Zealand (UN Human Rights Committee, 2020)
- Procedural Purity and the End of the Going Concern Safety Net
- Understanding Expenditure Sensitive Constituencies in Indian Elections
- Term Sheets in Investment Transactions: Legal Effect, Key Clauses, and Court Interpretation
- The 3-Hour Takedown: How India’s New IT Rules Are Reshaping the Digital Battlefield
- Differences Between FIR and NCR
- Tax Evasion vs Tax Avoidance: Legal and Ethical Perspective in India
- Dance of Death before the Deity of Delusion: Medical Negligence and the CPA
This research paper critically examines the banker–customer relationship in India, focusing on its legal foundation as a debtor–creditor relationship and its evolution amid technological and regulatory change. It explores how traditional doctrines under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 and Banking Regulation Act, 1949 interact with modern issues such as digital banking, data protection, fiduciary duties, and consumer rights. Through doctrinal and analytical study, it identifies challenges like unequal bargaining power, confidentiality concerns, and digital fraud, and proposes reforms to promote fairness, transparency, and accountability in the banking sector.
This study examines bigamy in India under Hindu, Muslim, Christian, and Parsi personal laws, analyzing its history, key cases like Sarla Mudgal and Lily Thomas, and its social, legal, and ethical impact on women and family structures. It also explores challenges in unifying personal laws, the judiciary’s role, and ongoing debates on a Uniform Civil Code.
Bail is not merely a procedural concession but a cornerstone of personal liberty under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. Rooted in the presumption of innocence, the principle “bail not jail” has guided Indian courts for decades. Yet, recent judicial trends, stringent statutes, and misuse of preventive detention laws reflect a worrying departure from this ideal. This article critically examines the legal framework of bail in India, explores landmark judicial pronouncements, evaluates challenges posed by special legislations like UAPA and PMLA, and suggests reforms to revive the fading promise of liberty in Indian democracy.
Introduction The development of policing has been shaped by historical, social, and technological transformations, each redefining how law enforcement operates…
Introduction The intersection of criminal law and matrimonial disputes has long been a complex terrain in Indian jurisprudence, particularly when…
Introduction The process of quashing First Information Reports (FIRs) represents a critical aspect of criminal jurisprudence in India, serving as…
Overview of the United States Constitution The United States Constitution, adopted in 1787 and coming into effect in 1789, serves…
Equality of Arms Equality of Arms is a foundational principle of fair trial rights, ensuring that no party in legal…
Introduction to Digital Privacy In our digital age, where information flows freely, digital privacy is paramount. It involves protecting personal…
Excerpt: Forensic Genetics – The Crossroads of Justice and Surveillance
Forensic genetics, or DNA profiling, is a potent instrument transforming criminal justice but whose unregulated fast-track adoption threatens serious violations of basic rights. Genetic information is particularly sensitive, as it discloses not just a person’s identity but also their health predispositions and the data of non-consenting relatives.
A lack of a strong legal framework leaves room for four significant risks:
1. Invasion of Autonomy and Privacy: Unregulated collection, storage, and cross-border transfer of DNA information erodes individual autonomy and right to informational privacy.
2. Profiling and Discrimination: Representative forensic databases pose a risk of disproportionate surveillance of certain ethnic minorities, and genetic health information could be exploited by organizations such as insurers or employers.
3. Mass Surveillance: Unrestricted DNA retention of unconvicted persons threatens to establish a “genetic surveillance state,” an essential interest expressed in cases such as the ECHR’s S. and Marper v. UK (2008).
4. Identification Errors: Laboratory error, partial samples, and probabilistic evidence misinterpretation create erroneous false positives and wrongful convictions.
The Indian Supreme Court decision in Justice K. S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India (2017) establishes that any use of sensitive genetic information by the state has to satisfy the high tests of legality, necessity, and proportionality. For ensuring justice and safeguarding human rights, forensic genetics needs urgent measures such as clear legislation, open regulatory scrutiny, and enforceable informed consent. Absent these restraints, this powerful technology could undermine the very freedoms it aims to secure.
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ISBN: 978-81-928510-0-6

