About the Firm

A multifunctional legal practise, Kay and Partners focuses on corporate and commercial disputes as well as comprehensive company law advice. It has seasoned young leaders. We offer a wide range of services across our entire business to maximise the outcomes of our clients’ efforts and objectives. Our main strength is coming up with creative solutions that cater to the specific needs of our customers while also being practical for business. Kolkata, Allahabad, and Delhi all have offices for us.

About the Responsibilities  

Prime areas : Drafting and research in Banking and Financial Law

Location

Noida office

Time Period

1 Month

Eligibility

  • 7th sem and above of 5-year law course or 3rd sem and above of 3-year law course.

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here:-  CVs along with a cover letter specifying the month of internship at ankitraturi@kaynpartners.com and cc to prashant@kaynpartners.com and connect@kaynpartners.com

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About the Firm

AAA Legal is a law firm with an illustrative legacy of 14 years of practice and advisory. Areas of practice include Arbitration, Banking laws, Competition laws, Data protection, Employment and labour, Intellectual property including Innovation & Technology, Real estate, Customs laws and investigations, White-Collar Crime & Criminal laws Sectors: Automotive, Data Privacy advisory, E-commerce, Renewable Energy, Entertainment and Media, Infrastructure & Construction, Real Estate, Telecom & Technology.

Intern Responsibilities and timings:

Work Related: Cyber Laws.

Internship days and timings: 2 days a week to the office (10 am to 4 PM) and 2 days online.

Location:

Office at EOK, South Delhi.

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may email CV at litigation@aaalegal.pro (Subject of email should mention ‘Physical internship in July 2022)’.

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INTRODUCTION

Money laundering seriously jeopardises nations’ financial systems as well as their integrity and sovereignty. The international community has taken some actions to eliminate these threats. It has been thought that we urgently need comprehensive legislation to stop money laundering and related activities. The Prevention of Money-laundering Bill, 1998 was introduced in Parliament to accomplish this goal. The Standing Committee on Finance received the bill and reported it to the Lok Sabha on March 4, 1999. The Standing Committee’s recommendations were broadly accepted by the Central Government, and they were included in the aforementioned Bill along with some other desired adjustments. The Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 was passed by parliament on January 17, 2003, but it has yet to be implemented in its entirety.

The term “money laundering” refers to the process of cleaning or hiding the source of money that was obtained illegally. Money laundering, according to the law, is the process of processing money obtained illegally through a legitimate business or sending it to a foreign bank so that when it returns, no one will be able to tell that it was obtained illegally. Money earned through illegal activities like extortion, drug trafficking, the supply of firearms, organised crime, etc. is cleaned during the money laundering process. It typically involves three steps. A criminal first enters the formal financial system with the stolen funds (Placement). Second, to prevent the origin or original identity of the crime money from being lost or disappearing, the money that has been injected into the financial system is layered or spread out across several transactions with the financial system (Layering). Thirdly, the money is incorporated into the financial system in such a way that the initial connection to the crime is completely lost, and the criminal and his accomplices can use the money because they receive it as clean money (Integration).

Additionally, the offence of money laundering includes:

● The greater proportion of investment goes back into illegal activity.

● The overall transactional cost of engaging in money laundering is significantly lower

● There is a greater pressing need to use clean liquidity to finance such reinvestment.

● Larger disparities between expected real returns from illegal and legal activity.

● The initial volume of illegal income that needs to be cleaned up is greater.

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE PREVENTION OF MONEY LAUNDERING ACT, 2002

Section 3 of the PMLA says whosoever directly or indirectly attempts to indulge or knowingly assists or knowingly is a party or is actually involved in any process or activity connected with proceeds of crime and projecting it as untainted property shall be guilty of the offence of money laundering. The penalties for the offences listed in Paragraph 2 of Part A of the Act are outlined in Section 4 of the Act. The relevant Act sections have granted the Director of the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU-IND) and Director (Enforcement) exclusive and concurrent powers to carry out the Act’s provisions.

The creation of a special court with the status of a session court for the prosecution of offenders under Section 4 of the act is discussed in Section 43 (1) of the act. The special courts are authorised by Section 43(2) of the Act to try offences other than those listed in Subsection (1), which the accused may be charged with under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, at the same trial. Section 44 addresses offences that can be tried in specialised courts.

CHALLENGES

The PMLA has undergone numerous amendments (in the years 2015, 2018, and 2019) designed to close the gaps in how it operates. However, the following clarifications of persistent legal ambiguities are provided:

● The 2019 Revision clarified how “proceeds of crime” are defined in section 2 (1)(u). According to the law, “proceeds of crime comprise property not only deducted or acquired from the listed offence but also any property which may directly or laterally be deducted or acquired as a result of any felonious exertion related to the listed 2 offence.” The requirement for an “explanation” to define what is meant by “proceeds of crime” still raises the question of whether or not it will have a retroactive impact.

● From a list of six statutes at the beginning, the PMLA currently includes “scheduled offences’ ‘ from thirty more statutes. There is a growing concern that adding less serious offences could undermine PMLA’s core purpose. The ED filed 1067 cases using the PMLA between 2012 and 2018. Only 13 people had been found guilty under the PMLA in 9 cases as of December 2019. These numbers demonstrate the need to simplify the statute’s implementation and give major offences more attention.

● All actions under Sections 50 (2) and 50 (3) are presumed to be “judicial processes” under Section 50 (4) of the PMLA, as defined by Sections 193 and 228 of the Indian Penal Code. Since ED proceedings are now considered “judicial proceedings,” any statement made prior to ED may be used as support. The general norm stated in Section 25 of the Substantiation Act, which states that confessional remarks made to a police officer are not acceptable as substantiation in a court of law, is not supported by this, nevertheless.

● Section 71 provides an overriding effect to PMLA, nevertheless, it is important to remember that the Supreme Court stated in Tofan Singh’s decision that special legislation must include respectable protection concerning the admissibility of confessional remarks The authority of these specialised investigating organisations that focus on economic crimes has been contested by nearly 200 applicants. Since 2014, the earliest petitions have been pending.

EFFECTIVENESS

Money laundering is regarded as essential to the efficient running of global and organised crime. However, money laundering has an impact on the social, political, and fiscal health of a nation. One of the profitable outcomes of money laundering was the undermining of the legal private sector, another was the undermining of fiscal label integrity, a third was the loss of control over profitable policy, a fourth was profitable deformation and insecurity, a fifth was the loss of profit, a sixth was the traps of privatisation sweats, and a seventh was a threat to one’s reputation.

The PMLA has been made severe enough to address the threat of money laundering that results from contaminated wealth acquired via illegitimate means, notwithstanding some obstacles and legal difficulties. Many organisations, including the RBI, SEBI, banks, and others, have been enlisted to spread information about these illicit practices. The power granted to the police by the PML Act is another matter that needs to be addressed. This Act provides a check on the power of the police, just like numerous other pieces of Indian legislation. Sections 44(b) and 45(1)(A) of the PML Act categorically subordinate the role of police officers by granting the powers to make complaints and to investigate offences under this Act to the authorities designated by the Central Government, much like a confession made to a police officer or while in the custody of a police officer has no value in the eyes of the law and it cannot be proven against the accused (Sections 25 and 26 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, respectively).

In a case moving before the top court, the AG stated that 4,850 cases have been filed under the PMLA, 2002 since this act’s introduction. The strong framework for risk-based selection of the cases for investigation in India accounts for the country’s low case registration rate. The Directorate of Enforcement is concentrating its attention on cases involving high-value proceeds of crime and cases involving serious predicate offences involving terror financing, narcotics, corruption, an offence involving national security, etc. It is pertinent to note that the FATF recommendation does not stipulate a threshold for the selection of cases for investigation under the PMLA.

CASE LAWS

Nikesh Talwar Shah vs. Union of India1 – The issue of giving bail to persons who were denied bail by the court in accordance with Section 45 of the PMLA, 2002, was addressed in this case. The petitioner in this instance filed a writ petition because his fundamental right had been violated. When someone was arrested and subsequently applies for bail, the court follows a twin-condition policy for granting bail, which is discriminatory in nature. However, when someone has applied for anticipatory bail—bail before a trial has even begun—the court grants them bail. In this case, the Supreme Court overturned the discrimination and asked that the applicant re-apply for bail in the same court.

ED vs. A. Raja2 – The 2G fraud case is the infamous name for this situation. With the opening up of the investment market in 1991, numerous private sectors stepped up to facilitate and make investments in the market. To ensure effective regulation, the government established a number of acts and directives. However, the CBI accused a few employees of using a shortcut when registering their telecommunications-related enterprises. A. Raja, who served as the department’s minister at the time, was also charged with violating the Prevention of Money Laundering Act of 2002 by accepting bribes and distributing a letter of intent to a number of private companies for the purpose of granting these companies licences for unified access services. However, the court did not find them guilty, and it ordered each of the defendants to pay Rs. 5 lacs along with a surety.

CONCLUSION

Therefore, it is evident that efforts to combat money laundering have advanced beyond the early stages of crimes related to drugs or terrorism. Additionally, the fight against money laundering has continually pushed for the broadest possible scope of predicate offences to be included in domestic laws. Money laundering has been defined and understood in a more comprehensive way that no longer only requires the projection of funds and the use of clean assets. According to the international mission, every activity that has anything to do with the proceeds of crime should be made illegal.

CITATIONS

1. W.P. (Cr) 67 of 2017

2. ECIR/31/DZ/2010

This article is written by Sanskar Garg, a last-year student at the School of Law, Devi Ahilya University, Indore.

About the Advocate

Bharat earned his law degree in 2011 and, at the age of 23, after placing first in the Delhi Judicial Service Exam, was appointed as a Civil Judge/Metropolitan Magistrate. During his four years on the Bench, he worked in a variety of judgeship duties.He left his position as a judge in 2016 and went back to practising law.

At L&L Partners, Bharat worked as a partner (formerly Luthra and Luthra Law Offices).Bharat has participated in a number of committees and policy talks and has also been named by the High Court as an amicus curiae to support the court in a number of important criminal cases. He serves on the steering group for the Young SIAC (Singapore International Arbitration Centre).

Bharat has conducted training programmes for aspiring and practising judges, IPS officers, investigators, prosecutors, arbitrators, defence attorneys, company secretaries, aspiring resolution professionals (under IBC), doctors, prison officials, forensic experts, and corporate counsel. He also serves as a guest lecturer and a resource at various academies.Bharat routinely writes about topics related to law, the criminal justice system, commercial/tech law, arbitration law, and policy. He is an avid reader and writer.At the moment, Bharat works as an independent attorney.

About the Responsibilities  

Internship opportunity at The Chambers of Bharat Chugh.

Prime areas : Arbitration, Financial Crime Defence, Information Tech/Social Media.

Location

Gurgaon office

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here:-  Mr. Mayank Arora, Advocate, email : contact@advocatemayank.in ,with : contact@bharatchugh.in in CC.

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About the Organization

A statutory authority of the Indian government, the Competition Commission of India (CCI), is in charge of upholding The Competition Act, 2002 across the country and stopping actions that would materially harm competition there. It was started on October 14th, 2003.

About the Responsibilities  

The usual CCI internship programme has been temporarily discontinued due to the Covid-19 epidemic. The Commission will, however, continue its online internship through August 2022 for the benefit of students after July 2022.

Only qualified candidates whose applications were received by the first of the preceding month (for example, for the internship in July 2022, application should be received by the first of June 2022, for the internship in August 2022, application should be received by the first of July 2022, and for the internship in September 2022, application should be received by the first of August 2022) will be taken into consideration.Future internships will follow the same schedule.

As an intern you are required to:-

  • The shortlisted candidates will be paired with CCI officers who will serve as their mentors and advisers.
  • The contact information for their mentors and guides will be given to the interns so they can stay in regular communication with them to do the tasks allocated to them.
  • The mentor or guide will set the length of the online internship based on the tasks given.
  • The Advocacy Division of CCI will organise an online orientation session for selected students in the first week of the month, and a review meeting will be held in the second week of the month through virtual mode.

Time Period

The duration of online internship shall be decided by the mentor/guide depending on the work assigned.

Eligibility

  • Only applicable to citizens of India.
  • Students from reputable institutions and universities with exposure to competition are eligible for the internship.
  • Students who already have a job cannot apply.

Perks

  • Certificate

How to Apply?

In the area designated for it on the application form, applicants must submit their applications duly signed or endorsed by their colleges or institutions under the heading “CERTIFICATION AND RECOMMENDATION BY INSTITUTION.” Alternately, applications must be sent with a scanned copy of an email or letter from the relevant school confirming that the student is a legitimate student there and is enrolled in the course (and year) specified in the internship application.Dean, Registrar, Head of Department, Director, or other authorised officials must issue such an email or letter. Applications must only be submitted online in PDF format. Applications sent in hard copy will not be accepted.

The topic or headline of emails containing such requests must be “Online Internship during the month of (insert targeted month) 2021.”

Interested candidates may apply from here:-  internships@cci.gov.in.

For official Notice:- https://www.cci.gov.in/images/content/en/extension-of-cci-online-intership-programme-july-to-august-20221653905252.pdf

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About the Organization

A military court in India is called the Armed Forces Tribunal. It was created in accordance with the 2007 Armed Forces Tribunal Act. According to the Law Commission’s 169th report from 1999, disciplinary and service concerns needed to be resolved quickly, and a separate tribunal for the armed forces and paramilitary organisations was suggested.

About the Responsibilities  

The Armed Forces Tribunal is seeking applications from law professionals for the job role of Tribunal Officer/Section Officer, for the Chandigargh Bench.

Location

Chandigarh

Openings

2

Remuneration

Level 7 (Rs 44,900 – 1,42,400)

Eligibility

  • People employed by the federal government, state governments, the supreme court, higher courts, lower courts, or statutory or autonomous agencies who get pension benefits:
  • possessing the following credentials and experience: holding an analogous post on a regular basis in the parent cadre or department, or holding a position in Level 6 of the Pay Matrix with five years of regular service in the grade.
  • Having a degree from an accredited university and two years of experience in judicial, administrative, or personnel work

Deadline for Applying

July 30, 2022

How to Apply?

The eligible officer’s application in the required pro-forma (Annexure-1) that can be saved in the event of selection may be sent to the, AFT Regional Bench Registrar, Chandigarh near Tank TCP, Chandimandir, Haryana, 134107 by the Department as soon as possible, but no later than June 30, 2022, together with photocopies of the candidates’ Annual Confidential Reports for the previous five years and a Vigilance Clearance Certificate.

Applications that are submitted without required documentation, a photograph, are not signed, and are otherwise deficient will be outright refused.

Interested candidates may apply from here:-  

https://aftdelhi.nic.in/vacancy/Vacancy_Circular_Chd_19_Apr_22.pdf

Note: The period of deputation including the period of deputation in another ex cadre post held immediately preceding this appointment in the same or some other organization or department of the Central Government shall ordinarily not exceed three years.

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GNLU SRDC ADR Magazine is making a call for papers for its volume 3 issue 2.

ABOUT

The Student Research Development Council (‘SRDC’) was established in 2014 as a platform for students to engage in collaborative academic research and to foster discussion around contemporary research questions in law and allied disciplines.

The ADR Student Research Group, under the aegis of the Student Research Development Council, founded its flagship initiative, the GNLU SRDC-ADR Magazine, in 2020. It is a publication inviting submissions from experts, working professionals and students interested in the field of Alternative Dispute Resolution. The aim of the Magazine is to keep pace with the recent developments, judicial decisions and practices being adopted in Indian and foreign jurisdictions, and to allow and promote a comparative and interdisciplinary understanding of various dynamics shaping this field of study.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

  1. Word limit: 2000-2500 words (exclusive of citations).
  2. The body of the manuscript should be in Garamond and the font size should be 12.
  3. The line spacing 1.5.
  4. The footnotes should be in Garamond, font size 10 and line spacing 1.
  5. The citations must conform to the OSCOLA style of citations, 4th edition.
  6. No hyperlinks are allowed.
  7. The piece should not contain any reference to the author, including their names and institutional affiliations
  8. Articles displaying high levels of plagiarism are liable for summary rejection
  9. Any failure to adhere to submission guidelines may result in rejection of the submission.
  10. Please find the detailed formatting guide (here).

Plagiarism Policy

The SRDC-ADR Magazine is committed to upholding the integrity of academic process and encourage original research and writing. Accordingly, it adopts stringent editorial safeguards to ensure that no plagiarized material is hosted on our website or published in the issue. The ADR Magazine adopts inbuilt editorial standards where submissions are pre-screened by the use of industry-standard software, aided by human intervention to assess the nature of similarity flagged by the software, whether incidental or substantive. Articles displaying high levels of similarity are thus liable to summary rejection in accordance with the extant guidelines issued by the University Grants Commission. Authors may be advised accordingly, and ensure that the submissions returned by the Editorial board flagging concerns about the content and proposed suggestions are complied with. Non-compliance with the plagiarism policy or the editorial board’s objections may result in rejection of the submission. The Editorial Board, accordingly requests the authors to cooperate with them during the review process.

Review Policy

The ADR Magazine adopts a blind review process. Hence, submissions containing references to the identity of the authors in the body of the manuscript are liable to rejection. Authors must provide their personal details and a passport-size photo in the body of the email, enclosing the submission as a doc.x attachment. The ADR Magazine reserves its right not to disclose the reasons for acceptance/rejection of a given submission to the authors. The final date for submission to feature an article in the next issue is provided in the Call-for-Papers issued by the Magazine from time to time. However, the ADR Magazine accepts submissions on a rolling basis, whereby articles submitted post the deadline for a given issue shall nevertheless be considered for review in the subsequent issues, subject to the authors providing their consent for the same.

The time taken for review of an Issue ranges between four to six weeks after the expiry of the deadline. While the Editorial Board makes its best attempts to ensure a constant frequency of publication, the review process may be delayed on account of extraneous circumstances. The Editorial Board shall ensure the timely intimation of such delays at which stage the cooperation of the authors shall be highly valued. A manuscript under review shall not be submitted to another publication pending the outcome of the editing process. 

Once accepted, the manuscript shall become a part of the ADR Magazine’s intellectual property. In case of citations involving unpublished research, it is assumed that the Author had obtained the necessary permissions from the authors of the concerned unpublished sources. Any liability arising in this regard shall be borne solely by the Author and the Magazine assumes no burden for the same.

MODE OF SUBMISSIONS

ROLLING BASIS

srdcadr@gnlu.co.in

CONTACT DETAILS

srdcadr@gnlu.co.in

vc@gnlu.ac.in

https://gnlusrdcadrmagazine.com/contact-us/

https://www.linkedin.com/company/gnlu-srdc-adr-magazine/

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INSTITUTE OF LEGAL EDUCATION is organizing the 1st National Conference on the Constitutional Law, 2022.

ABOUT

Institute of Legal Education is a Legal Institute to Promote the Legal Education managed by I.L.E. Educational Trust (Former Institution known as “Indian Journal of Legal Review”). ILE has been established with the vision of excellence in legal education and research. Our ultimate visions are establishing the platforms for quality legal education and promoting legal gens even to the perspicacious society. Institute of Legal education Run with the Moto Vision of Grasp – Educate – Evolve. Institute of Legal Education managing the six excellent journals and will start online free certified courses from January 1st, 2023.

ELIGIBILITY

Everyone is welcome to participate in the conference and express their thoughts and ideas. The conference is open to Law Students, Advocates, Professionals, Jurists, Members of the Academia, as well as Non-Law Students.

THEME

The Conference themes are focused on the Following:
Evaluation of the Constitution in India Since 1946
● The Constitution – Freedoms and Rights

SUB-THEME

Sub-themes of the Conference: Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:

Evaluation of the Constitution in India Since 1946
● The Constitutional Debaters Futurist Ideologies and Current Scenario
● The Constitution and it’s supremacy over the 75 Years
● The Preamble – Diamond of the Constitution
● The Constitutional Review
● Judicial Review and its enforcement
● 105 Amendments – Its Importance and Effects
● Unsolved Historical and Political Issues like Article 44, Reservation, etc.
● The Constitutional Current Trends by the Judiciary
● Provisions for individual development and fair LGP.

The Constitution – Freedoms and Rights
● Evaluation of Freedom of Speech and Expression in the Digital Era
● Privacy Freedom and State Control
● Freedom of Press and Mob Mentality
● Right to Religion – Post-Independence India and Independence India
● Current Status of Right to Reject (NOTA)
● Gender Rights and Constitutional Developments
● Constitutional and judicial Protection on Languages in India

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

  1. The Conference will be held by Virtual on Google Meet.
  2. All communication through the mail be addressed to info@iledu.in
  3. Research Papers and Articles must be accompanied by an abstract not exceeding 300 words.
  4. Multiple authors and authorships are allowed. No single author can submit more than one paper in a single theme. An Author can submit paper no more than 3 papers in various sub-themes.
  5. All manuscripts must compile with the Indian Journal of Legal Review Journal’s (IJLR) Submission Guidelines (https://ijlr.iledu.in/submission-guidelines/) and Terms and Conditions (https://ijlr.iledu.in/terms-and-condition/).
  6. The Paper Must be in the category of Article (2000 – 3000 words) or Research Article (3000 – 8000 Words)
  7. The manuscript should contain the name of the paper, the name of the authors, and their institutional affiliation.
  8. The main body of the manuscript should be in Times New Roman style, font size 12, with 1.5 line spacing.
  9. Footnotes in Times New Roman Style, Size 10, with 1.0 line spacing.
  10. All headings must have uniform formatting.
  11. Texts and footnotes should conform to the Bluebook 20th Edition.

REGISTRATION FEE

  1. There is no Registration Fee or Participation for this Conference to percent your research.
  2. Only the Top 10 papers will be published in the Indian Journal of Legal Review with ISSN No. 2583-2344. The Publication fee is Rs. 300/- (Fixed. No other charges will not be charged at any stage of publication). The Publication fee must be paid after the Top Papers Confirmation.

PERKS

  1. Suggestions and inputs from Experienced and Learned Panelists;
  2. All the Paper Presenters shall be provided with an e-Certificate of Presentation
  3. Selected papers shall be published in an ISBN Book (Publisher: Institute of Legal Education Publication House) with no Article Processing Charges and a Soft Copy of the Book shall be made available for free;
  4. All participants will be provided with a participation certificate.

LINKS

https://forms.gle/o2CuoMEBRJhnP4tU7

https://bit.ly/3n7uocY

CONTACT DETAILS

Prasanna S, Program Director and Coordinator, +91 94896 71437 (or)
info@iledu.in

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THE CENTRE FOR RESEARCH AND HUMAN RIGHTS, KARNAVATI UNIVERSITY is making a call for papers for its INTERNATIONAL INTERDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE ON COVID AND IT’S IMPACT ON HUMAN RIGHTS 2022.

ABOUT

Human rights and different social movements resort to human dignity in order to justify their claims and their actions. Human rights are often defined as entitlements that human beings possess just by virtue of their inherent dignity. This conceptual link between human rights and inherent dignity is as popular as it is unhelpful. It is often argued that internationally recognized human rights are common to all cultural traditions and adaptable to a great variety of social structures and political regimes. Such arguments confuse human rights with human dignity. All societies possess conceptions of human dignity, but the conception of human dignity underlying international human rights standards requires a particular type of” liberal” regime.

For decades the global debate over human rights has been a dialogue of the deaf. This interminable argument pits advocates of civil and political rights against proponents of economic and social rights. The former takes the classic liberal position that individual freedom is the foundation of liberty and, accordingly, that the only fundamental rights are “negative” ones that constrain state power.

Human rights are the common denominator of human beings because they rely upon human dignity. They are applied regardless of nationality, religion or belief, race, ethnicity, or gender. In coalition to satisfy and advance the goals of the UWSL Center for Research on Human Rights, this conference is going to address various issues including the protection of Human values and lives in the times of Covid through universal recognition.

THEME

Contributions can be relied upon the following themes, from a multidisciplinary perspective:

  1. The impact of Covid on Right to Education
  2. The impact of Covid on Right to Health
  3. The impact of Covid on Right to Access to Justice
  4. The impact of Covid on Rights of Laborers
  5. The impact of Covid on Right to Trade Business and Occupation

Note: These Themes are indicative and not exhaustive, any other topic which is directly or indirectly related to the main theme may be taken.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

  1. Submissions are accepted only in the English language.
  2. Each applicant must submit a maximum 300 words (5 keywords) abstract through google form by 1st of July, 2022. For more information, kindly refer to https://karnavatiuniversity.edu.in/news/uwsl-news/2022/iicchr-2022/.
  3. Abstract must contain details about the names of the author(s), contact details, institutional affiliation, and designation.
  4. The abstract must expressly include the novelty and usefulness of the idea that the author wishes to put forth and must categorically mention the specific contribution of the article beyond the existing available literature.
  5. Co-authorship (with a cap of two authors) is permitted.
  6. Acceptance or Non-acceptance of the abstract will be communicated on or before 5th  July 2022
  7. The body of the abstract should be in Times New Roman, with Font Size – 12, and 1.5-line spacing. The footnotes should be in Times New Roman, Font Size 10, and single line spacing.
  8. The citations must conform to the OSCOLA style of citation or any uniform citation.
  9. After the conference, selected presentations would be called for full papers and the last date of submission for the same is 15th  August 2022.

IMPORTANT DATE

  1. Last date of submission of abstract: On or before 1st July 2022
  2. Communication of acceptance of Abstract: 5th July 2022
  3. Last date of submission of full paper (2,500 words): 15th August 2022
  4. Participants will be responsible for their own accommodation and travel expenses.

REGISTRATION LINK AND ABSTRACT SUBMISSION LINK

https://forms.gle/Cui3JghXNZWqxLSf7

REGISTRATION FEES

Free for all Participants and Presenters.

MODE

For Participants from India: Physical Mode

For Participants from outside India: Virtual Mode

CERTIFICATES AND AWARDS

E-certificates of participation will be provided to all the registered participants.
E-certificates of the presentation will be provided to all the paper presenters from outside India.

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-Report by Avinash Pandey

The Supreme Court recently upheld the death penalty awarded to a 37-year-old man for the rape and murder of a 7and a half-year-old girl who was mentally and physically challenged, in the case of Manoj Pratap vs State of Rajasthan. The crime had occurred in 2013 in the state of Rajasthan when the convict Manoj Pratap was around 27 years old. The 3-judge bench comprising Justice AM Khanwilkar, Justice Dinesh Maheshwari, and Justice CT Ravi Kumar had made an observation that the crime that was in contention was of extreme depravity while looking at the vulnerable state of the victim and the manner in which the crime had been committed.

The victim had been kidnapped by the accused party in this case on a stolen motorcycle by misleading her after offering the little girl sweets and other attractive eatables. Thereafter the accused had taken the victim to a silent area where he committed the crime and at the same time, her head was smashed which resulted in multiple injuries including bone fractures and dislocations. The doctors had reported gruesome injuries on the private parts of the victim as well.

The convict urged in front of the court that he was only 28 years old at the time he had committed the crime and furthermore he has a family and a minor daughter. However, the Supreme Court asserted that these are not mitigating factors and there is no foreseeable probability that there can be any rehabilitation or reformation in the behavior of the convict.

The Supreme Court while upholding the death sentence for the convict stated that the convict was a danger to the maintenance of peace and order in the society. The court said that the conduct that the convict has shown in the past and after going through the facts of the current case it is not possible for the court to reduce the penalty or the punishment from a death sentence to life imprisonment.

For generations, people have argued about the cultural and ethical shame associated with capital execution. Nonetheless, the court has repeatedly given verdicts in favor of the retention of the death penalty in the nation.

Article 21 of the Indian constitution, while recognizing the right to life as an indisputable and basic value, contains several restrictions. The 35th Law Commission Report of 1967 outlined how repealing the death sentence legislation in India just wouldn’t improve society as a whole. Maintaining the safety of people at the forefront of its debate, the study concluded that in order to maintain harmony and security in a society with huge educational or ethical distinctions, a mechanism for the death sentence was necessary for some situations.

The punishment allotted to the convict, in any case, is based on the facts and not on the severity of the crime which was concluded by the Supreme Court in this judgment. In some situations where there is no scope for any reform, the death penalty can be given as has been held in this case.