Indian Journal for Research in Law and Management

Advancing Law and Management

ISSN No. : 2583-9896

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Showing 10 of 4023 articles Page 5 of 403
Abhaya
Maitreyi College Delhi University
Abstract
The Right to be Forgotten (RTBF) has emerged as a significant privacy right in the digital age, enabling individuals to seek the removal of personal information that is no longer relevant or necessary. This article examines the development and current status of the RTBF in India, tracing its origins from the European Union’s General Data […]

Case Commentary Anuradha Bhasin Vs Union of India

July 17, 2026 Volume III, Issue 9
Abhaya
Maitreyi College Delhi University
Abstract
The Supreme Court of India’s judgment in Anuradha Bhasin v. Union of India, (2020) 3 SCC 637, delivered on 10 January 2020, marked a defining moment in India’s constitutional jurisprudence for the digital age. Arising from the unprecedented communication blackout imposed in Jammu and Kashmir following the abrogation of Article 370 in August 2019, the […]
Abhaya
Maitreyi College Delhi University
Abstract
The advent of artificial intelligence has given rise to deepfakes — hyper-realistic synthetic media capable of fabricating the words, actions, and identities of real individuals. In India, the viral spread of a non-consensual deepfake video of actress Rashmika Mandanna in 2023 exposed the alarming inadequacy of the existing legal framework in addressing AI-generated harm. This […]

BISWAJIT DAS V. CENTRAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION

July 17, 2026 Volume III, Issue 9
Pramiti Kothawade
ILS Law College
Abstract
The case arose from a fraudulent insurance scam which involved officials connected with Life Insurance Corporation of India (LICI). The appellant (Biswajit Das), worked as a Development Officer in LIC. He was charged of conspiring with others to fraudulently acquire insurance claim amounts by pretending that the covered individual had passed away while, in reality, […]
Pramiti Kothawade
ILS Law College
Abstract
The ongoing humanitarian crisis during times of war has long been established, as civilians are often the main victims of armed conflict despite having laws intended to protect them. Although the principle of proportionality was established in IHL to protect civilians from undue suffering, it is being increasingly misused by state actors as a justification […]
Pramiti Kothawade
ILS Law College
Abstract
In today’s world, the digital economy has completely transformed the manner in which products and services are provided to customers. Unlike traditional markets, digital platforms no longer operate through isolated products; rather, they function through interconnected ecosystems where multiple services are integrated into a single technological environment. In this context, tying and bundling have emerged […]

THE RISE OF DATA AS MARKET POWER IN COMPETITION LAW

July 17, 2026 Volume III, Issue 9
Pramiti Kothawade
ILS Law College
Abstract
Data has become an integral source of market power in digital economies of scale, especially for companies such as Google, Amazon etc., who use data to enhance AI models, predict consumer behaviour and eventually raise their position in the market and create barriers for other companies to enter the market. This change in data-driven markets […]
Sneha Biswas
NALSAR University of Law
Abstract
When a marriage has completely fallen apart, with no shared life and no real possibility of the two people coming back together, should the law still refuse to end it simply because neither party can prove the other did something wrong? This is the question at the centre of the debate around irretrievable breakdown of […]
Sneha Biswas
NALSAR University Of Law
Abstract
Every contract begins with a proposal, but not every statement that looks like one actually is. Indian contract law draws a firm line between a proposal that binds the person making it and an invitation to treat, which is merely a signal that someone is open to receiving proposals. This distinction matters enormously in practice, […]
Sneha Biswas
NALSAR University Of Law
Abstract
The Indian Constitution is one of the longest and most detailed governing documents in the world, yet it contains a striking omission: it sets no time limit for the President or a Governor to act on a bill passed by the legislature. This gap gave rise to what is known as the pocket veto, where […]