Indian Journal for Research in Law and Management

Advancing Law and Management

ISSN No. : 2583-9896

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Showing 10 of 3675 articles Page 6 of 368
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 […]
Shifa Iqbal
Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi
Abstract
Since the debates held by the Constituent Assembly in 1948-49, the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) as set out in Article 44 of the Constitution of India has been one of the most controversial and politically charged matters in the history of the Indian Constitution. The purpose of this study is to examine UCC in detail […]
Bhavya Sharma
Bharati Vidyapeeth New Law College, Pune
Abstract
The Consumer Protection Act of 2019 is an important piece of legislation for India in its quest to bring about a transformation in its consumer law regime, given the changing nature of trade transactions and marketing activities. The Consumer Protection Act of 2019 has been passed as a replacement for the inadequate Consumer Protection Act […]

Whistleblowing By Lawyers and Their Impact

June 11, 2026 Volume III, Issue 8
Aditi Sonal
Narsee Monjee Institute of Managemement, Bangalore
Abstract
The tension between professional duty and moral responsibility and its consequences forms the core research problem that this study aims to explore. It examines the complex relationship between the two as faced by lawyers particularly when there is a conflict between their duty of confidentiality and their moral responsibility to administer justice. The methodology used […]
Hiya Saxena
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar National Law University, Sonepat
Abstract
The fashion industry is one of the most significant sectors, both economically and creatively. At the same time the fashion industry is vulnerable to intellectual property (IP) violations like counterfeiting, design piracy, trademark infringement and unauthorized use of creative assets. The IP clauses work against these violations and provide contractual safeguards beyond registration and statutory […]

We Trusted You!

June 9, 2026 Volume III, Issue 8
Abhishek Garg
GLA University, Mathura, ILSR, BBA LLB Hons 2nd year, Student
Abstract
A warm welcome and greetings to the reader, through this paper, we intend to study what defection is, how it affects a democracy and how nations try to tackle it. In a democracy, people elect their leaders. This is one of the basic features of democracy. India is a significant subject of examination because it […]
Puneet Sharma
Amity University, Madhya Pradesh
Abstract
Preventive detention occupies a peculiar place in Indian constitutional law: it is the one power by which the State may confine a person without charge, trial or conviction, and it is written not into a temporary emergency statute but into the fundamental-rights chapter of the Constitution itself. This paper argues that the constitutional safeguards surrounding […]