The Judicial Recognition and Enforcement of the Right to Environment: Differing perspectives from Nigeria and India

Environmental rights are one of the emerging rights in the arena of international human rights law and international environmental law. This paper analyses the judiciary’s roles in advancing the right to a healthy environment in Nigeria and India. These two countries have certain similarities and yet there exists a remarkable difference between the levels of recognition of the right to environment in both countries. The concept of environment rights will be traced by drawing the link between the environment, human rights and sustainable development. Further, the Nigerian oil industry has impacts on the country’s political economy and the environment of host-communities. In fact, there are reasons why there are certain peculiarities that Nigerian courts face in deciding oil-related environmental cases. An analysis of legal provisions and statutes of both the countries will be presented to highlight the status of the right to environment.

Out of the Colonial Closet, But Still Thinking ‘Inside the Box’: Regulating ‘Perversion’ and the Role of Tolerance in De-Radicalising the Rights Claims of Sexual Subalterns

This paper primarily intends to throw light on the postcolonial reading of the legal engagements of sexual subgroups that depicts the complex layering of sexual subjectivities in a postcolonial context, which are not captured in a straightforward ‘lesbian’ or ‘gay’ reading. The use of the term ‘sexual subaltern’ in this paper is mainly intended to capture this complexity. Through the discussions on the engagement of the sexual subaltern with law, the author draws on subaltern scholarship to provide a more complex articulation of the position of the sexual subaltern as well as the relationship between law and the subject. The first part of the paper, briefly discusses the explosion of homoerotic imagery, literature and sex talk in the context of sexual subalterns in postcolonial India, to illustrate that the voice of the sexual subaltern is being gradually accommodated within the postcolonia discourse, and that the public space has become more amenable to sexual subaltern claims.

Law as a Medium of Democratic Discourse

The article proposes to argue a philosophical foundation of legal legitimacy descriptively basing it from Jürgen Habermas’ idea of the discourse theory. It addresses two closely connected questions: firstly,how is legitimacy of law possible? Legitimacy of law is possible through the democratic medium. The second section briefly charts the differing viewpoints of Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Kant on the lines of reconciling individual autonomy and collective autonomy. Further, similarly, justifications of legal legitimacy receive an internal reference of the legal system through its generation of internal norms. Accordingly, the third section of the article critiques Weber and Hart’s ideas of legitimacy on the ground that the internal point of view of law excludes will formation suited for plural and democratic societies. Secondly, it prescribes how legitimacy takes shape? It argues that legitimacy derives from public contestation using the discursive model of democracy. It reasons and defends that law is a product of public conversation which is reflexive and self-correcting. The article argues that the revolutionary potential of law is realized in this emancipatory reconstruction where people are rights bearers. Therefore, law is a system of rights presupposing people as free and equal deliberators.

Copyright v. Copyleft: A Feminist Perspective on Marginalization under Copyright Laws

Copyright law grants certain exclusive rights to the author of a work, aiming to encourage creativity. This article uses jurisprudential theory, particularly the feminist perspective, to bring out the fallacies in the existing copyright regime and advocates in favour of the emerging copyleft regime, which is against granting exclusive rights to the creator of the work. The article argues that copyright law is inadequate in incorporating the varied kinds of works of different and diverse sections of the society and promotes marginalization of oppressed groups. This exclusion flows from the basic fact that copyright is based on a patriarchal structure. On the other hand, the copyleft regime is based on both masculine and feminine values, and therefore, is a better regime to challenge the existing marginalization.

Enhancement of Maritime Law Education in the Indian Context

Trade is the life blood of a nation and shipping is the predominant mode through which international trade is carried out. India, as an emerging economic superpower, enjoys a rich maritime heritage in trade and commerce and its associated law is firmly rooted in historical antiquity. While modern Indian jurisprudence enjoys a high degree of repute and recognition in common law circles, in the maritime law field, India is yet to secure a position of superiority in the international arena. Even so, the potential for development in this field is immense, and is realizable through sound university education in public and private maritime law followed by professional legal training and practice. Needless to say, public and private sector support and involvement are necessary to achieve the desired aims and objectives. The advancement of maritime affairs, whether in the public or private domain, depends to a large extent on the availability of maritime law expertise in the country. While technical maritime education and training is world class, and has been so for several decades, placing India as perhaps the most sought after crew supply country in the world, maritime law education is markedly deficient. This paper attempts to explain why maritime law education is necessary in the Indian context and how such education can be enhanced and lifted to its fullest potential within the maritime higher education milieu in India at both undergraduate and post graduate levels.

Legal Exclusion through ‘Criminalization’, ‘Stigmatization’ and ‘Invisibilization’ in the Pre and Post Independence India

Law as an institution strives to perform both inclusionary and exclusionary functions in any societal structure. In the present paper, the author highlights the exclusionary role performed by law in Pre and Post Independent India with the help of three primary modalities; ‘Criminalization’, ‘Stigmatization’ and finally ‘Invisibilization’, and then proceeds to offer a possible explanation to such societal exclusion along with advancing a critique to the same.

Ashoka Thakur v. Union of India: A Divided Verdict on an Undivided Social Justice Measure

Starting with Thakur, this paper travels through the mediatory role of the courts in resolving serious controversies over reservation; it examines if opposition to reservation has any constitutional basis; and argues that the 93rd Amendment to the Constitution is valid in its entirety. It also argues that a casteless society cannot be read in the Constitution, the fifty-percent limit on reservations is not a binding norm, and that the determination of the validity of laws included in the Ninth Schedule on the ground of breach of the basic structure of the Constitution may remain a myth. In sum, the paper supports the constitutional provisions and parliamentary initiatives for reservation.

From Professional Responsibility to “Business of Law”: Regulating the Ethical Implications of Legal Process Outsourcing

The global business environment is increasingly concerned with reducing cost and increasing efficiency and legal process outsourcing (‘LPO’) is proving to be the perfect vehicle to achieve this. India has emerged as the most favourable destination amongst legal outsourcers as its developing economy, convenient time-zone, and large population of English-speaking and common law trained lawyers create unmatched cost incentives. Furthermore, LPO services are no longer restricted to providing administrative and support services as their role has expanded to include research, legislative tracking and analysis, and document drafting. Despite the promising growth exhibited by the LPO sector, this paper seeks to explore the future prospects of the LPO firms, in terms of regulation, due to the host of legal and ethical concerns generated by legal outsourcing.

Notes Towards a Theory of Implied Powers in (Indian) Constitutional Law

“Implied powers” pose difficult conceptual problems for legal scholars. They are invoked in many contexts and appear to comprise several distinct legal phenomena. Yet there is no clear understanding of what we mean by an “implied power” – apart from the very basic notion that it is not an express power – and of what forms it may take, and no existing theoretical framework that can help us in this respect. This article takes a first step towards creating such a theoretical framework by identifying criteria – the content of the power, the authority holding it, and the nature of the implication involved – that may be used to classify all references to “implied powers” in the positive law. The article focuses on Indian constitutional law to see how the relative paucity of implied powers in the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on constitutional matters may be analysed using the proposed framework. In this perspective, the paper suggests that the separation of powers and the judicial emphasis on restricting governmental powers vis-à-vis citizens are relevant factors in explaining both the absence of a general implied powers doctrine and its specific use in an intergovernmental context.

Lost in Appeal: The Downward Spiral from Naz to Koushal

The Supreme Court in Suresh Kumar Koushal v. Naz Foundation has missed an opportunity to build on the earlier Delhi High Court decision and shape rights jurisprudence in a creative and rights enhancing manner. Instead it has reverted to a restrictive reading of the law that is full of logical and analytical inconsistencies and the incorrect use of precedent. This demonstrates an unwillingness to appreciate and assess the compelling evidence that was placed before it. In this piece, I will focus on the mass of material that the court did not take into account while arriving at its decision. These include the Attorney General’s submissions, affidavits of parents of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender persons, and scientific material placed before the Court. I will also examine the arguments in the judgment related to presumption of constitutionality, vagueness of law and the dichotomy between the sexual act and homosexual identity.