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National Law School of India Review Profile
National Law School of India Review

@NLSIRev

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The NLSIR is the flagship student-edited law review at @NLSIUofficial and the oldest student-edited legal academic journal in India.

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Joined October 2018
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National Law School of India Review
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With AI enabling the creation of deepfakes and recordings, image-based sexual abuse (IBSA) has entered a darker phase, as India continues to rely on a patchwork of outdated legal provisions. This piece from NLSIR Vol 34(1) proposes a legal framework to address India’s legal.
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In the fourth piece in NLSIR's Special Blog Series entitled Courting the Climate Crisis, Dr. Anirudh Sridhar explores the contentious evolution of the Loss and Damage (L&D) Fund, juxtaposing its distributive justice model with the corrective justice approach of liability-based.
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In the third piece in NLSIR's Special Blog Series entitled Courting the Climate Crisis, @ashwinmurthy6 critically examines India's erosion of environmental safeguards through ex post facto clearances, juxtaposing judicial rhetoric condemning retrospective approvals with rulings.
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National Law School of India Review
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The second piece in NLSIR's Special Blog Series, entitled Courting the Climate Crisis, is an interview with Dr. Arpitha Kodiveri on her book, “Governing Forests,” which critiques India's exclusionary forest laws. The conversation covers colonial continuities in forest.
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In the first piece in NLSIR's Special Blog Series entitled Courting the Climate Crisis, @Ranjana_rahul critically examines India's landmark but contested recognition of rivers as legal persons. Juxtaposing India's 2017 Uttarakhand High Court rulings with New Zealand's Te Awa.
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National Law School of India Review
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NLSIR announces its latest Special Blog Series, entitled “Courting the Climate Crisis: Legal Engagements with Climate Politics in India.” The series features contributions from leading legal scholars, each interrogating the role of law in shaping, responding to, and resisting the
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In this piece for NLSIR Online, @goragpur offers a socio-legal critique of the Supreme Court’s December 2024 order in T.N. Godavarman, which addressed the classification of Rajasthan’s sacred groves (Orans) as 'forest lands' under the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980. The.
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In this piece for NLSIR Online, Debarchita Pradhan examines a critical gap in India’s insolvency framework: the exclusion of solvent group companies from substantive consolidation, which disproportionately disadvantages operational creditors. The article argues for expanding.
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National Law School of India Review
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In this piece for NLSIR Online, @anshuldalmia1 scrutinizes the Supreme Court’s suo moto authority to invalidate subordinate legislation, as affirmed in Bihar Rajya Dafadar Chaukidar Panchayat v. State of Bihar. The article critiques the Court’s reliance on vague criteria, such.
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In this piece for NLSIR Online, Siddharth Johar critically examines India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) and its 2025 Draft Rules, focusing on Section 36, a provision that grants the government sweeping access to personal data held by private entities. The article.
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