Weekly Update: Blog Posts, Opinions and Articles

Updates from the last week: blogs, articles, opinions, editorials and journalism: On Law and Other Things,  Dr Tarunabh Khaitan (Oxford) has posted an update on his research concerning housing discrimination and the need for legal regulation. The update relates to the Gujarat Disturbed Areas Act, as well as the draft rules under the Real Estate Regulation Bill 2016.

AG Noorani has also written about housing discrimination and redress under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution, for Frontline.

On The Proof of Guilt, Abhinav Sekhri (advocate, Delhi) has posted an analysis of provisions of the Indian Penal Code that deal with rash and/or negligent behaviour, arguing that a historical analysis of Section 304-A suggests a more objective approach to understanding criminal liability for negligent acts.

On SpicyIP, Dr. Shamnad Basheer (IDIA Trust, P-PIL) has posted on copyright access and infringement in the case of the Malayalam film, Avalude Rakal (‘Her Nights’) as part of anongoing series on intellectual property and sex.

In Caravan, Nikita Saxena has a longform piece that details the history behind the ongoing sexual harassment complaints and litigation against RK Pachauri, former Chairman of the The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI).

Proposals for a Uniform Civil Code have been in the news lately:

On Legally India,  Alok Prasanna Kumar (Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy) also writes that India might need fewer judges than has been claimed by the Chief Justice of India, in order to resolve critical issues of judicial pendency (mirrored at Hindustan Times and Mint).

Saikat Datta writes in Scroll on the recent Supreme Court judgment concerning 1,528 encounter deaths in Manipur, arguing that the first step towards a radical reinterpretation of human rights has been taken.

Apar Gupta (advocate, Delhi) writes in The Wire on the Supreme Court’s slow march towards eroding online intermediary liability, analysing a recent case concerning advertisements for prenatal sex determination.

Sanjay Ghose writes in The Wire on recent proposals by the cabinet to rename the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts, arguing that their colonial legacies extend beyond nomenclature.

Ilangovan Rajasekharan writes in Frontline on protests by lawyers at the Madras High Court, against amendments to the Advocates Act that will allow for debarment on grounds of discipline.

On LiveLaw, former Supreme Court, Justice KT Thomas writes on the judgment in the recent case on judicial appointments, arguing that any future cases that touch upon the basic structure doctrine should be decided by a bench of the same strength (or larger) as the one that decided Kesavananda Bharati. 

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