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.
Employment Guarantee Defused
April 20, 2026
This piece argues that VB-GRAMG Act shifts power to the Central Government while stripping away meaningful accountability, undermining the original spirit of employment guarantee. By introducing discretionary controls, budget caps, and technological barriers, it risks weakening workers’ ability to claim their rights. The author warns that the rights-based framework under MGNREGA may gradually turn into a controlled, state-driven scheme with diluted guarantees.
The Copyright Play: AI, Section 52, and the Acts of Fair Dealing
March 15, 2026
Written as a five-act drama, this paper analyzes AI training under Section 52. It argues for recognizing tokenization as transformative research. It focuses on training process, that is distinct from generated output, and argues that it is a non-infringing necessity to encourage innovation.
The Assignment Paradox: Reconciling Personal Guarantor Liability with Debt Transfers under IBC Resolution Plans
April 28, 2026
This article examines the “assignment paradox” in Indian insolvency law, where creditors assign resolved corporate debts under IBC resolution plans while continuing to enforce personal guarantees, producing contradictory judicial outcomes and Article 14 concerns. It maps the split between “discharge on assignment” and “guarantee survival” lines of authority and shows how current approaches permit either creditor double recovery or arbitrary guarantor discharge. Drawing on Sections 31 IBC and 133–134 of the Contract Act, as well as key decisions including Essar Steel, Lalit Kumar Jain, Ramakrishnan and BRS Ventures, the article argues that tribunals have misread the statutory hierarchy governing guarantees. It proposes a Dual Consent Framework under which CoC commercial wisdom governs corporate restructuring, but any modification or extinction of guarantees requires express creditor–guarantor consent and NCLT verification of a “resolution value gap” cap on total recovery, reconciling collective efficiency with guarantor equity.
Poking the Tiger: The Supreme Court Rewrites India’s Treaty Entitlement Rules
March 11, 2026
The author examines the Supreme Court of India's 2026 decision in Tiger Global and its implications for the interaction between treaty entitlements and India's General Anti-Avoidance Rule. The judgment, it is argued, marks a decisive doctrinal shift from formal treaty compliance to a substance-over-form approach, reframing the 2016 Protocol's grandfathering clause from an inviolable guarantee to a rebuttable presumption subject to anti-avoidance scrutiny. By embedding GAAR principles into treaty interpretation, the Court subordinates legitimate expectations to domestic anti-abuse frameworks, ultimately conditioning treaty benefits on demonstrable commercial substance over mere formal compliance.