Indian Journal for Research in Law and Management

Advancing Law and Management

ISSN No. : 2583-9896

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Showing 10 of 3609 articles Page 3 of 361
Udhaya Samuel L
Sastra Deemed University
Abstract
Economic offences have emerged as one of the most serious threats to the financial stability and governance structure of modern nations. In India, the rapid expansion of trade, banking, digital finance, and global economic integration has significantly increased opportunities for white-collar crimes and financial frauds. Economic offences include acts such as money laundering, tax evasion, […]
Arun Kumar S
Sastra Deemed To Be University
Abstract
The rapid growth of digital technology has fundamentally altered the manner in which personal information is stored, shared, and accessed. In the modern digital era, individuals leave behind permanent online traces through social media platforms, search engines, online databases, and digital communication networks. Unlike traditional forms of information that gradually disappear with time, digital data […]
Vijaya Yazhini S
Sastra Deemed University, Thanjavur
Abstract
The demand for donning Scheduled Tribe (ST) status by Meitei community snowballed into constitutional and socio-political crisis in the state after an order of 2023 passed by Manipur High Court to the then Manipur Government to take necessary steps so that they can be included in ST list which led to ethnic riot and bloody […]
Ritu Govind Chhaddani
Abhinav Education Society's Law College
Abstract
The power of the Indian Parliament to amend the Constitution under Article 368 is a vital feature of India’s constitutional framework, enabling the Constitution to adapt to changing social, political, and economic needs. At the same time, this power is subject to important constitutional limitations to preserve the foundational values of the Constitution. This article […]
Utkarsh Yadav & Akanksha Choudhary
Chanakya National Law University
Abstract
N/A

FREE CONSENT AND CAPACITY TO CONTRACT

May 23, 2026 Volume III, Issue 8
Rishikeswaran. S
Sastra Deemed to be University
Abstract
The Contract Law prescribes basic requisites for a contract to be legally enforceable, including free consent and competency of parties. The contract is void when the consent has not been genuine and obtained by coercion, fraud, misrepresentation, undue influence or mistake. Mistakes may be of facts, or law, affecting the agreements. It further provides that […]
Shahida Parween & Vatsal Chaudhary
Law College Dehradun, Faculty of Uttaranchal University
Abstract
The rapid expansion of international commercial arbitration has transformed arbitration into the preferred mechanism for resolving cross-border commercial disputes. Built upon the principles of party autonomy, procedural flexibility, confidentiality, and minimal judicial intervention, arbitration seeks to provide an efficient alternative to traditional litigation. However, the arbitrability of disputes involving allegations of fraud continues to remain […]
Ramnath. S
Sastra Deemed University
Abstract
Judicial review is one of the most significant features of constitutional governance and democratic administration. It acts as a mechanism through which the judiciary examines the constitutionality and legality of legislative enactments and executive actions. In democratic societies, judicial review preserves constitutional supremacy, safeguards individual liberties, and ensures that governmental authorities function within the limits […]
Utkarsh Yadav & Akanksha Choudhary
Chanakya National Law University
Abstract
Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) occupy a unique position within India’s constitutional and economic framework. Conceived as instruments of socio-economic transformation after independence, PSUs were expected to combine commercial efficiency with public accountability. However, their dual character as corporate entities incorporated under company law and as “State” instrumentalities under Article 12 of the Constitution has created […]
Utkarsh Yadav & Divyanshi Rathour
Chanakya National Law University & City Law College Lucknow
Abstract
India’s welfare architecture has historically suffered from inefficiency, corruption, and systemic leakages that prevented public benefits from reaching intended beneficiaries. The introduction of Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), supported by the JAM Trinity—Jan Dhan bank accounts, Aadhaar biometric identification, and mobile connectivity—marked a transformative shift in governance and welfare delivery. This paper examines the effectiveness of […]