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- Writs Against Private Bodies Under Article 226: A Comprehensive Legal Analysis
- Differentiating Article 226 and Article 227: Supreme Court Jurisprudence
- Dissenting the Equitable Mirage: The Karnataka High Court’s Misguided Reprieve in Munisanjeevamma v. State of Karnataka
- The Principle of Tax and Equity as Strangers: A Cornerstone of Strict Statutory Interpretation in Indian Taxation Law
- Dissenting from the Shadows: Why the Kerala High Court’s Ruling in The Authorised Officer, South Indian Bank Ltd. v. Sheela Francis Parakkal: Missteps on Writ Jurisdiction Against Private Banks
- The Dialogue of Ethnicity and Assimilation: International and National Perspectives with Key Case Laws
- From Punitive to Reformative: A Socio-Legal Analysis of Community Service as a Punishment under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023
- From Exclusion to Inclusion: Reassessing Arbitrability of Fraud, IP, and Employment Matters in India
Browsing: Foreign laws
A Former UK Supreme Court Justice’s Stark Warning on Constitutional Failure In this incisive constitutional analysis, Lord Jonathan Sumption, former…
Justice Rosalie Abella, Justice Frank Iacobucci, and the Living Tree of Canadian Law Canadian constitutional law has evolved not only…
A Turning Point in U.S. Immigration Law? Separating Viral Claims from Legal Reality In recent weeks, dramatic claims have circulated…
Abstract This article examines the global debate on Textualism versus legislative intent through the influential Herbert W. Vaughan Lecture delivered…
This report examines Myanmar’s legal aid system from its establishment through the 2016 Legal Aid Law to the present crisis following the February 2021 military coup. The analysis reveals how Myanmar progressed from having minimal formal legal aid infrastructure to developing a comprehensive national system with government boards and civil society partnerships between 2016-2021. However, the military takeover systematically dismantled these institutions, forcing international organizations and courageous civil society groups to provide legal services under dangerous conditions. The report documents the collapse of government legal aid boards, restrictive amendments to legal aid legislation, mass arrests creating overwhelming demand for services, and the persistent barriers facing both legal aid providers and justice seekers. Despite severe repression, organizations continue delivering critical legal representation to thousands, including politically sensitive cases. The findings highlight both the fragility of legal aid systems under authoritarian rule and the extraordinary resilience of human rights defenders operating in crisis environments.
How the Soviet Union Fell: From the Berlin Wall to the 1991 USSR Dissolution — Glasnost, Perestroika, Gorbachev, Yeltsin &…
There are careers that make noise, and then there are careers that quietly remake the institutions we take for granted.…
In One of the Most Consequential Legal Rulings in Modern American History In one of the most consequential legal rulings…
Finding the Right Legal Help? Trust SolutionLaw for Comprehensive, Client-Focused Support If you’re looking for dependable legal representation in Canada…
When Marble Listens: Judge Gorsuch, Jasmine Crockett, and the Battle Over a Living Constitution A courtroom conversation between tradition and…
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