Indian Journal for Research in Law and Management

Advancing Law and Management

ISSN No. : 2583-9896

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Showing 10 of 3631 articles Page 1 of 364
Preet Juneja
NMIMS, Hyderabad
Abstract
This paper is a critical analysis of key issues to determine whether India’s interpretation of public policy exemption under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 is a genuine reflection of harmonization with the international standards of arbitration practice or is cosmetic compliance with the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration. Public policy, under global […]
Sabrina Shamim
South Asian University
Abstract
Cross-border maritime insolvency typically arises in an event whereby shipping companies with both assets and creditors in many jurisdictions incur a complex cross-section of admiralty law and insolvency law. With the continued cross-border flows of ships and with companies owning assets and creditors located across borders, “it becomes hard to deal with insolvency. Some of […]
Keerthana Srinivasan & Meera Srikant
Sastra Deemed University; Sastra Deemed University
Abstract
The accelerating integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into trade remedy investigations is changing how national authorities collect, process, and evaluate trade data. In India, AI-assisted tools promise to improve efficiency, accuracy, and speed in anti-dumping investigations. This strengthens protection for domestic industries against unfair trade practices. However, this technological advancement brings complex legal and policy […]
A B Joshma
Sastra Deemed To be University, Thanjavur
Abstract
The increasing cases exposing fraud, corruption, and other forms of misconduct are highlighting a need for a person who plays crucial role in promoting transparency, accountability and ethical conduct within corporate organizations by reporting such cases. And such individuals are called as whistleblowers. For sound corporate governance whistle blowers are important and hence those are […]
Aliza Irshad
Amity University, Noida
Abstract
Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) compliance has emerged as a significant aspect of modern corporate governance. Investors, regulators, and stakeholders increasingly expect companies to operate sustainably while maintaining transparency and accountability. In India, ESG regulation has gained momentum through the introduction of the Business Responsibility and Sustainability Reporting (BRSR) framework by the Securities and Exchange […]
Dr. Shazila Shajahan
Assistant Professor at Mar Gregorios College of Law, Trivandrum, Keralam
Abstract
This research paper examines the legal and regulatory architecture necessary to achieve sustainable development within the framework of India’s “Viksit Bharat” 2047 vision. Drawing from a comprehensive interdisciplinary discourse, the paper analyses the legal imperatives of Artificial Intelligence (AI) sovereignty, the shift toward mandatory Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) compliance in the corporate and banking […]
Priyam Pratik
Faculty of Law, University of Allahabad
Abstract
The concurrent deployment of economic sanctions and punitive tariffs by major trading powers has produced a novel and understudied challenge for public international law. Individually, each instrument carries a recognized, if contested, legal genealogy: sanctions find their footing in Chapter VII of the UN Charter and a network of domestic emergency powers statutes, while punitive […]
Priyam Pratik
Faculty of Law, University of Allahabad
Abstract
This article undertakes a comprehensive examination of the international legal architecture that has developed to protect women and children from violence, discrimination, and exploitation. Drawing on a comparative analysis of universal and regional treaty regimes, the article traces the evolution of normative standards from the foundational Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination […]
Priyam Pratik
Faculty of Law, University of Allahabad
Abstract
International refugee law, once conceived as a relatively contained set of obligations addressed to the aftermath of the Second World War, has grown into a sprawling normative architecture that must now contend with climate-driven displacement, digitised persecution, statelessness on an industrial scale, and the resurgence of extraterritorial push-back practices by states increasingly hostile to asylum. […]
Priyam Pratik
Faculty of Law, University of Allahabad
Abstract
The doctrine of sovereign immunity, once treated as an almost inviolable corollary of state equality under international law, has been subjected to sustained pressure from at least three directions over the past four decades. The first is the humanitarian intervention tradition, reconstituted in the early 2000s as the Responsibility to Protect, which premises the legitimacy […]