The NLS Forum curates pioneering research and current developments in the fields of law, public policy, social sciences and humanities.
Our work bridges academic scholarship, legal practice and
civil society discourse.
We present the University blog and five student journal blogs, where leading scholarship from around the world is edited by our faculty, researchers and students. To submit your work, please refer to the submission guidelines provided for each blog.
The Arbitrator You Didn’t Choose: Party Equality and Joinder in Adavya Projects
October 8, 2025
This piece argues that the Supreme Court's ruling in Adavya Projects, which allows parties to an arbitration agreement to be impleaded after the tribunal is constituted, undermines the fundamental principle of party equality and creates a procedural unfairness akin to the unilateral appointments invalidated in Perkins Eastman. The article proposes a corrective safeguard, modelled on international rules like the ICC, requiring a subsequently joined signatory's express consent to the pre-constituted tribunal to preserve procedural integrity.
Rethinking Law Firm Ownership in the AI Age
October 3, 2025
The prevailing business model of Indian law firms relies on labor arbitrage. Junior associates handle high-volume, low-value work that is billed to clients at rates higher than their cost. In effect, firms achieve profitability and scalability only by continually increasing headcount to generate more billable hours. While historically effective, this revenue model is now coming […]
Balancing Shareholder And Creditor Interests In Corporate Insolvency: A Global Perspective
October 4, 2025
Introduction Corporate directors have fiduciary responsibility primarily to shareholders under company law. However, they are also subject to common law duties of loyalty and good faith that serve the corporate entity as a whole, largely excluding other stakeholders. Corporate insolvency grapples with a fundamental question: where does the primary duty of directors lie when a […]
The Monetary and Fiscal Mechanism
August 25, 2025
Part 1 of this blog series focused on the distributive aspects of taxation: public goods and the market failure that they address; why it is preferable that taxes be progressive and relative to income and wealth; the political and economic case for taxing capital and redistribution; and the economic and distributive implications of tariffs. This […]