tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15602189.post435524115400587179..comments2023-09-21T16:17:51.838+05:30Comments on Law and Other Things: Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09348738084817273397noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15602189.post-66834576823372987972009-07-05T23:47:03.435+05:302009-07-05T23:47:03.435+05:30Your Blog has a very live community and the discus...Your Blog has a very live community and the discussions are very informative.<br /><br />I would like to have your comments on the case I have filed against Maya Statues.Rs2,000 crores of Public Money and more than 3,000 crores of land.No Tenders and no Electricity paid by the Contractors to the state . No Environment Clearance and thousands of trees have been cut down in NOIDA and Lucknow for the memorial. Mayawati has also installed election symbol replica of BSP worth Rs 52 Crore in public places.<br /><br />We hope that the SC does something.<br /><br />www.indialawyers.wordpress.comRavi Kanthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00117473911100252620noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15602189.post-46845053607163587562009-07-02T00:38:35.493+05:302009-07-02T00:38:35.493+05:30I think that's quite right Avi. This comes up...I think that's quite right Avi. This comes up particularly around labour laws, which the government has largely left untouched, while dramatically shifting their economic and labour policies. The Court has several times in the past decade made complete or partial u-turns in labour jurisprudence. This is in part because justices attitudes may have changed, but even more importantly government policy changed. To get the government to turn back would be a costly political showdown. Instead, they have read laws developed with a socialist spirit in a way that more conforms with the spirit of the day (I will hold off on defining what the spirit of today is, but it's not socialism). I am interested to see whether the new government will now try to rewrite some of these laws, especially around labour (IDA, Contract Labour Act) to more conform with their policies.Nick Robinsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07188754890135788657noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15602189.post-89634621733522270312009-07-01T21:33:41.983+05:302009-07-01T21:33:41.983+05:30The article, irrespective of one's perspective...The article, irrespective of one's perspective on India's "liberalisation" does hit the mark very accurately. Since the 1990s, the ideological debate between fundamentalist market ideologies, fabian society economic messages, law and development approaches, and the development as freedom idea expounded by Amartya Sen has not engaged with each other in the minds of policy makers. Thus, our laws reflect older laws that bear the imprint of different times, with varying emphasis - a bit like the vehicles on our roads. Also, the courts have shifted from a socialist approach (very akin to law and economics), where the function of law was to support a socialist economy, to one where the function of law is to support sustainable development, with the emphasis on the latter. I have not found any jurisprudence that tracked the jurisprudential shift, with its problematic dealing with the principle of stare decises, adequately.<br /><br />Avi Singh.Avi Singhhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09023261082447799809noreply@blogger.com