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The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law 2018 [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Mahendra Pal Singh, Niraj Kumar
The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law 2018 [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Mahendra Pal Singh, Niraj Kumar
Edizione [1st ed. 2019.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XIX, 398 p. 9 illus.)
Disciplina 340.9
340.2
Collana The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law
Soggetto topico Private international law
Conflict of laws
Public law 
Human rights
Criminal law
Private International Law, International & Foreign Law, Comparative Law
Public Law
Human Rights
Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure Law
ISBN 981-13-7052-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Part I: Comparative Law: General Themes -- Comparative Law and Globalization in Asian Perspectives: Two Proposals of Methodological Frameworks (Yasuda Nobuyuki) -- On the Origin of Legal Diversity by Means of Comparative Law, or the Role of Legal Education in the Solution of Legal Conflicts (Rostam J. Neuwirth) -- Part II Private Law -- Contribution by Prof. Anil Kumar Rai -- Part III Public Law -- Section A-Constitutional Law -- A Comparative and Jurisprudential Analysis of the “Umbrella Movement” - Is It a Constitutional Moment? (LIN Feng) -- Varying Approaches to Religion under the Electoral Law (Virendra Kumar) -- South Asian Constitutionalism in Comparative Perspective: the Indian “prototype” and some recent borrowings in the 2015 Nepalese Constitution (Domenico Amirante and Pasquale Viola) -- Commonalities in the Law and Development Movement and the Indian Public Interest Litigation: Reconsidering the Roots of Their Current Difficulties (Hajime Sato) -- Justifying Privacy: The Indian Supreme Court’s Comparative Analysis (Pritam Baruah and Zaid Deva) -- Judicial Interpretation in China (Liu Jianlong) -- Section B-Human Rights -- Rethinking ‘Memory Laws’ from a Comparative Perspective (Kanika Gauba) -- Settlement of Indigenous Land Disputes by the CHT Land Dispute Resolution Commission of Bangladesh: Challenges and Solutions (Dr. Mohammad Moin Uddin) -- The Protection of People with Disabilities in China: Current Status and Challenges (Han Dayuan) -- Section C: Economic Regulations -- Legitimate Expectations in Investment Arbitration: A Comparative Perspective (Aniruddha Rajput and Sarthak Malhotra) -- A Century Of Evolution Of The Mexican Central Bank: The Road Towards Its Constitutional Autonomy (Jorge Vargas Morgado) -- Part IV: Criminal Law -- Giving Precedence to the Indian Penal Code (Stanley Yeo) -- The Immutability of the Marital Rape Exemption Clause in Indian Rape Law (B.B. Pande) -- Part V: Recent Developments -- Review of: Transformative Constitutionalism in Latin America: The Emergence of a New Ius Commune (Akshaya Chandani).
Record Nr. UNINA-9910350246303321
Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2019
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law 2019 [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Mathew John, Vishwas H. Devaiah, Pritam Baruah, Moiz Tundawala, Niraj Kumar
The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law 2019 [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Mathew John, Vishwas H. Devaiah, Pritam Baruah, Moiz Tundawala, Niraj Kumar
Edizione [1st ed. 2021.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Singapore : , : Springer Nature Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XI, 371 p. 3 illus., 2 illus. in color.)
Disciplina 340.9
Collana The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law
Soggetto topico Private international law
Conflict of laws
International law
Comparative law
Administrative law
Constitutional law
Mediation
Dispute resolution (Law)
Arbitration (Administrative law)
Medical laws and legislation
Environmental Law
Private International Law, International and Foreign Law, Comparative Law
Administrative Law
Constitutional Law
Dispute Resolution, Mediation, Arbitration
Medical Law
ISBN 981-16-2175-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto The Limits and Challenges of Comparativism -- A Call for Order: Intra-Disciplinary Challenges and ‘Comparative Environmental Law’ -- The Curious Case of Overfitting Legal Transplants -- The Concept of Arbitral Award under the New York Convention: A Comparative Study of English, French and Indian Approaches -- A comparative assessment of the legal framework on cross-border consumer disputes -- Sustainable Development Component in Model BITs - A Comparative Analysis -- Proportionality – A Balancing Act for Achieving Constitutional Rights (A Comparative Study) -- Authoritarian Constitutions: Audience and Purposes -- The Rechtsstaat as a German Concept? –An Attempt at Contouring and Contextualizing -- Does Authoritarian Legality Work for China?.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910495230603321
Singapore : , : Springer Nature Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2021
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law 2020
The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law 2020
Autore John Mathew
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Singapore : , : Springer, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (292 pages)
Disciplina 340.2
Altri autori (Persone) DevaiahVishwas H
BaruahPritam
TundawalaMoiz
KumarNiraj
Collana The Indian Yearbook of Comparative Law Series
ISBN 981-9954-67-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Preface -- Summary -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- Part I Public Law: Constitutional Law -- 1 Reclaiming Rechtsstaat from the Stuntmen of the State -- 1.1 Autocrats and Constitutions -- 1.1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Autocrats View About Some Tenets of a Liberal Democracy -- 1.2.1 Liberalism -- 1.2.2 Constitutions -- 1.2.3 Democracy -- 1.2.4 Authoritarianism -- 1.2.5 Populism -- 1.3 Reclaiming the Rechsstaat -- 1.3.1 Rechtsstaat -- 1.3.2 Constitutionalization -- 1.4 Conclusions -- 2 Selective Surname System and Its Constitutionality: Culture and Personal Dignity -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Current Situation and Problems of the Surname System for Married Couples -- 2.2.1 Historical Background of the System of Married Couples with the Same Surname -- 2.2.2 Problems with the Current System -- 2.3 Resistance to the Selective Surname System -- 2.3.1 What is the System of the Separate Surname for Married Couples? -- 2.3.2 Opposition to the System of Selective Surnames -- 2.4 Judgments of the High Court and the Supreme Court on the Optional Surname System -- 2.4.1 2014 Tokyo High Court Judgment and 2017 Supreme Court Judgment -- 2.4.2 2021 Supreme Court Decision -- 2.5 Conclusion -- 3 Buddhist Cosmological Narratives and Hybrid Statehood in Sri Lanka and Myanmar -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The Buddhist Notion of a Ruler -- 3.3 Understanding the Ashokan Persona in Sri Lanka -- 3.4 Twisted Statehood in Post-Independence Sri Lanka -- 3.5 Projection of Kingship as a Karmic Bond in Myanmar -- 3.6 Bodhisattva Continuity in Myanmar's Post-Colonial Constitution Building -- 3.7 Aung San Suu Kyi: Hybridity of Buddhist Consciousness and Western Democracy -- 3.8 Conclusion -- References -- 4 Besmirching Honorable Men: The Defamation of Politicians in Singapore -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Legal Framework of Singapore's Defamation Laws.
4.2.1 The Constitutional Protection of Free Speech -- 4.2.2 Criminal Defamation: The Penal Code -- 4.2.3 Civil Defamation and the Defamation Act -- 4.3 Defamation and Free Speech: The Case Law -- 4.3.1 The issues -- 4.3.2 Launching the Sullivan Defense -- 4.3.3 The Court of Appeal's Problematic Logic -- 4.3.4 Subsequent Developments -- 4.3.5 Defaming 'Good Men': Beyond Sullivan -- 4.3.6 The Fragile Public Figure: Goh Chok Tong and Ors v Jeyaretnam -- 4.4 The 1997 General Elections and Tang Liang Hong -- 4.5 The Police Reports -- 4.6 The Verdict -- 4.7 The Appeal -- 4.8 The Case -- 4.9 The Appeal -- 4.10 Damages for Public Figures -- 4.10.1 General -- 4.10.2 Growth of Damages for Public Figures -- 4.10.3 How Much is Your Reputation Worth? -- 4.11 Conclusion -- 5 The Constitutional Value of the Guarantee Clause -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The Historical Purpose of the Guarantee Clause -- 5.2.1 United States -- 5.2.2 Australia -- 5.2.3 India -- 5.3 Contemporary Utility of the Guarantee Clause -- 5.3.1 United States -- 5.3.2 Australia -- 5.3.3 India -- 5.4 Limitations on the Utility of Guarantee Clause as Peacetime Emergency Power -- 5.4.1 Problems with Defining Internal Disturbance -- 5.4.2 Military Acting in Aid of Civil Authorities -- 5.4.3 Implied Limitations on Guarantee Clause -- 5.5 Conclusion -- 6 Beyond Friend and Enemy: The Stranger as a Political Category in Colonial Modernity -- 6.1 The Colonial Officer and His Incomplete Sovereignty -- 6.2 From Concrete Familiarity to Abstract Estrangement as a Mode of Governance -- 6.3 Ideology Versus Practice -- 6.4 Strangeness and Anxiety -- 7 The European Social Model Facing the Economic and the COVID Pandemic Crises -- 7.1 The Distinct Constitutional Qualities of the American and European Polities -- 7.2 The Constitutional Asymmetry Between the Social Member States and the European Polity.
7.3 The EU Under Pressure of the Twin Crises of the Twenty-First Century -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Part II Administrative Law -- 8 Administrative Justice in Iran -- Oscillating Between Monism and Dualism -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 The Dichotomy Between Monism and Dualism in Administrative Justice -- 8.3 Administrative Justice After the Constitutional Revolution of 1906 -- 8.4 Administrative Justice After the Islamic Revolution -- 8.5 Bilateral Administrative Acts -- 8.6 Litigious or Entre Partes Cases -- 8.7 Administrative Liability -- 8.8 Conclusion -- 9 Administrative Adjudication in the Common Law: A Comparison of Setups and Legal Tensions with India -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 The Australian System -- 9.3 The System of Merits Review -- 9.4 The Separation of Powers and the Merits Review -- 9.5 The Composition and Appointments Process to the Tribunals -- 9.6 The Procedural Standards Before the Tribunal -- 9.7 Nature of Decision and Extent of Intervention by Courts -- 9.8 The Amalgamation and Service Body Aspect -- 9.9 United Kingdom System -- 9.10 The Overview of the Existing Tribunals -- 9.11 The Composition and Appointments Process to the Tribunals -- 9.12 "Court" and "Tribunal" Are Different? -- 9.13 The Procedural Standards Before the Tribunal -- 9.14 Amalgamation Aspect -- 9.15 United States of America System -- 9.16 The Evolution of the System in the Present Form -- 9.17 Composition and Appointments -- 9.18 Procedural Elements and the APA -- 9.19 Canadian System -- 9.20 Composition and Structure -- 9.21 Procedural and Evidentiary Aspects -- 9.22 The Adjudication and the Extent of Independence -- 9.23 Conclusion -- Part III Private Law: General Themes -- 10 Intellectual Property and Investment Treaties: Comparing Newest Indian and Australian Treaty Practices -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Definition of Investment and IP -- 10.2.1 Australian Practice.
10.2.2 Indian Practice -- 10.2.3 Comparison -- 10.3 Exclusion of IP-Related Measures from the Ambit of Expropriation -- 10.3.1 Australian Practice -- 10.3.2 Indian Practice -- 10.3.3 Comparison -- 10.4 Performance Requirements and IP -- 10.4.1 Australian Practice -- 10.4.2 Indian Practice -- 10.4.3 Comparison -- 10.5 Conclusion -- Part IV Administrative Law -- 11 R2P: A Comparative Study: Between Universalism and Asian Exceptionalism -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Part One: History of the Development of R2P -- 11.2.1 ICISS Report 2001 -- 11.2.2 Recognition of R2P in the United Nations Framework: Path Through the UNSC -- 11.2.3 In Larger Freedom -- 11.2.4 2009 Report -- 11.3 Establishing Universalism -- 11.4 Part Two: Problematising Universalism Through Case Studies -- 11.5 Part Three: Asian Exceptionalism -- Annexure -- 12 Intersection of Law, Religion, Customs, and the Problem of Child Marriage in Global South: A Comparative Study of India, Nigeria and Uganda -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Indian Perspective -- 12.3 The Influence of Religion on Child Marriage in Nigeria -- 12.4 Child Marriage in Uganda: Moving Beyond the Legal Norms -- 12.5 Synthesizing the Three Case Studies -- 12.6 Conclusion -- 13 Developmentalism, Forest Protection, and the Idea of Greater Justice in India -- 13.1 Developmentalism as Freedom -- 13.2 Period of Environmental Ignorance -- 13.3 The Period of Environmental Consciousness -- 13.4 Forest Protection in India and the Search for Greater Justice -- 13.5 The Forest Protection in the Age of Climate Change -- 13.6 Looking for a Solution -- 13.7 Conclusions.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910767508803321
John Mathew  
Singapore : , : Springer, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Open Markets, Free Trade and Sustainable Development [[electronic resource] ] : Perspectives from EU and India / / edited by Mahendra Pal Singh, Wolfram Cremer, Niraj Kumar
Open Markets, Free Trade and Sustainable Development [[electronic resource] ] : Perspectives from EU and India / / edited by Mahendra Pal Singh, Wolfram Cremer, Niraj Kumar
Edizione [1st ed. 2019.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (309 pages)
Disciplina 339.460954
Soggetto topico International law
Trade
International environmental law
Human rights
International Economic Law, Trade Law
International Environmental Law
Human Rights
ISBN 981-13-7426-0
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto About the Indo-German Conference (Helmut Goerlich & M.P. Singh) -- 1. Introduction (Amitabh Kundu) -- Part I- Social Market Economy -- 2. Social Rights in the European and the Indian Union (Joerg Luther) -- 3. Transitioning from the Informal to the Formal economy: The Continuing Relevance of State Law (Kamala Sankaran) -- Part II- Markets and Cultural Diversity -- 4. Open Markets and Diversity of India’s Politico-legal Ordering (Amar Pal Singh) -- 5. A Peasant’s Imagination of Alternative Legal Order: Land Reform in India, Food Security and the WTO (Pratyush Kumar and Andreas Buser) -- Part III- Market Liberalisation and Sustainable Development -- 6. India in pursuit of Sustainable Development (A. Jayagovind) -- 7. From Social Market Economy to a Sustainable Market Economy (Michael von Hauff) -- 8. Environment and Globalisation: Antogonistic or Agnostic (Niraj Kumar) -- 9. Sustainable Public Procurement in Europe: Creating Markets or Distorting the Internal Market (Rike Krämer-Hoppe) -- Part IV: Co-operation between Indian and the European Union -- 10. The EU-India Development Partnership - Legal framework and political perspectives (Markus Kaltenborn) -- 11. Access to Services in the EU Market: With specific focus on Movement of Natural Persons (R.V. Anuradha & Ronjini Ray) -- Part V: Market Liberalisation in Goods and Services -- 12. Free Trade Agreements and national constitutional law – from CETA and TTIP onwards (Ralph Zimmermann) -- 13. Common Market under the Constitution of India (Uday Shankar) -- 14. National Treatment Obligation under Article 3 of GATT vis-à-vis Indian Constitution (Sanjay Jain) -- Part VI: Market: Freedom of Establishment and Free Movement of Capital -- 15. Capital Flows into India – Role of Monetary Transfer Provisions in India’s International Investment Agreements (Prabhash Ranjan) -- 16. Legal Risks in Foreign Direct Investment in India (Anil Rai) -- Valedictory and Concluding Remarks (Upendra Baxi).
Record Nr. UNINA-9910350245903321
Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2019
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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