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- Railway Hawker Evictions in India: Constitutional Rights, Livelihood Protection and the Law on Railway Redevelopment
- Trans-Boarder Reputation and Principle of Territoriality
- False Rape Allegations in India: Legal Rights, Anticipatory Bail, Defence Strategies & Remedies Under BNS 2023
- Ajay Maken v. Union of India (2019): Delhi High Court’s Landmark Judgment on Right to Housing, Rehabilitation & Right to the City
- School Certificate Alone Not Enough to Prove Age in Rape Cases. J&K High Court Sets Aside Conviction
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The situation of Cross-Border Insolvency arisen when debtors and creditors are spread across the various jurisdiction, creating challenges for effective insolvency dispute resolution. For cross-border insolvency, India has Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC) which provides a consolidated domestic framework, it has only two provisions under Section 234 and Section 235.
The UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency, adopted on 30th May, 1997 offers key element such as access, recognition, relief, cooperation. Other jurisdictions including the U.S., U.K., Singapore, and South Korea have adopted it to harmonize insolvency proceedings and protect stakeholders across borders.
In India, judicial precedents such as Jet Airways v. SBI (2019), Ruchi Soya v. Union of India (2021), and SBI v. Kingfisher Airlines (2017) have underscored the need of stringent laws for cross-border cooperation. Responding to this, the Insolvency Law Committee (ILC) in 2018 recommended the adoption of the Model Law through a proposed Draft Part Z in the IBC, extending its application to corporate debtors (including foreign entities) while refining Sections 234–235.
Cross-Border Insolvency has become one of the key challenges across the jurisdiction. Currently, India’s cross-border insolvency framework for resolving Insolvency are not strictly implemented. India should participate in the UNCITRAL working groups to deal with the cross-border insolvency issues. This will help the India to participate in international practice and build global standards for cross-border insolvency cooperation.
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AI can now make things that look like they were made by humans like art, music, stories, code, designs, and even new inventions. This raises a big question: who should own these creations, and why?
Courts and governments are trying to decide rules about authorship, originality, ownership, and copying. The challenge is to support human creators while also allowing AI to grow responsibly.
To make this work, we need clear rules about how AI uses training data, what counts as fair use and how licensing works.
These rules should be supported worldwide to protect creativity, attract investment, stop misuse, and let AI help humans instead of replacing them.
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ISBN: 978-81-928510-0-6

