A blue sky background with a cut of the Indian Supreme Court and silhouettes of two people in the foreground.

The NLS Blog

Children in Conflict with Love: Adolescent Autonomy and the Paradox of Protection

Subhadra Nair

This piece examines the efficacy of a Romeo-Juliet clause and interrogates the protectionist framework within the POCSO Act.

Illustration of two hands shaking to symbolize a bilateral agreement, with the Indian flag and Mauritian flag crossed above the handshake against a blue background.

IJIEL Exchange

Poking the Tiger: The Supreme Court Rewrites India’s Treaty Entitlement Rules

Devanshi Shukla

An analysis of the Supreme Court's rewriting of treaty entitlement rules.

Blue-toned digital illustration featuring video game controllers and gaming icons over a futuristic binary-code background.

IJLT Blog

April 2026 : IJLT Tech-Law Bulletin

IJLT Editorial Team

Updates on the Online Gaming Rules and DABUS Patent Application

NLSBLR Blog

The Assignment Paradox: Reconciling Personal Guarantor Liability with Debt Transfers under IBC Resolution Plans

Dhiren Gupta

Paradox of assignment of creditor's assignment of corporate debt and enforcement of personal guarantee.

Four workers, 3 men and one women carrying out construction work.

NLSIR Online

Employment Guarantee Defused

Jean Dreze

Argues that VB-GRAMG Act shifts power to the Central Government while stripping away meaningful accountability, undermining the original spirit of employment guarantee.

The left panel depicts a picture of the author, Nidah Kaiser. The center panel displays the cover of the book In the Shadow of Minority Rights: Decolonising Gender, Liberalism, and the Politics of Difference by Sagnik Dutta, illustrated with people gathered beneath a courthouse-like structure. The right panel has a yellow background with the text, “Book Review - Sagnik Dutta’s ‘In the Shadow of Minority Rights: Decolonising Gender, Liberalism, and the Politics of Difference’.”

SLR Forum

Sagnik Dutta's 'In the Shadow of Minority Rights: Decolonising Gender, Liberalism, and the Politics of Difference'

Nidah Kaiser

Book Review of Sagnik Dutta's 'In the Shadow of Minority Rights: Decolonising Gender, Liberalism, and the Politics of Difference'

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.

Rashi Mitra

To Ban or Not to Ban: Children’s Digital Rights versus Social Media Restrictions

May 8, 2026

Noor Ameena

An Exit from Personal Law? Atheism, Inheritance, and the Architecture of Secular Default Law

April 24, 2026

Zakeria Mohammed Yacoob, Arvind Narrain

Between Lectures | Interview | Justice Zakeria Mohammed Yacoob with Arvind Narrain

April 21, 2026

A blue sky background with a cut of the Indian Supreme Court and silhouettes of two people in the foreground.

Subhadra Nair

Children in Conflict with Law/Love: Adolescent Autonomy and the Paradox of Protection

July 6, 2026

Viraj Thakur, Nida Adeel Mohammed

Consent, Conduct, and Their Constraints: Why Estoppel Cannot Cure Non-Arbitrability

May 3, 2026

This essay critiques the Supreme Court’s decision in Sanjit Singh Salwan v. Sardar Inderjit Singh Salwan for allowing estoppel to uphold an arbitral award in a dispute involving public charitable trusts, despite such disputes being non-arbitrable under §92 CPC. It argues that estoppel cannot validate what is legally a nullity, nor override statutory limits or public policy embedded in non-arbitrability doctrines. By prioritizing party conduct over jurisdictional invalidity, the judgment risks undermining the structural boundaries of arbitration and creating uncertainty around void awards and compromise decrees.

Jean Dreze

Employment Guarantee Defused

April 20, 2026

Sanjali Rupnawar, Mustafa Rajkotwala

Is Encrypted Data Personal Data under India’s DPDP Act? – Identifiability, Liability, and Regulatory Design in a Growing Digital Economy

April 8, 2026

Deepika M G

Regulating the Gig Economy: Is It a State Failure to Address the Market Failure?

March 27, 2026

Nidah Kaiser

Book Review: Sagnik Dutta’s ‘In the Shadow of Minority Rights: Decolonising Gender, Liberalism, and the Politics of Difference’

May 2, 2026

Assembling India’s Constitution: An Interview with Rohit De and Ornit Shani (Part II)

April 27, 2026

Rohit De, Ornit Shani

Assembling India’s Constitution: An Interview with Rohit De and Ornit Shani (Part I)

April 27, 2026

Rohit De, Ornit Shani

Denial of Death Penalty Amidst Public Outrage in the RG Kar Hospital Case – Reflections of the Defence Lawyer Post One-Year

April 20, 2026

Senjuti Chakrabarti

Sayed Kirdar Husain and Kritvee Sharma

The Hidden Transformation of Public Data: Algorithmic Conversion by SSDEs into Proprietary Market Power

June 30, 2026

This article analyses how Systemically Significant Digital Enterprises (SSDEs), by virtue of their dominant position, convert publicly available user-generated data into proprietary intelligence through algorithmic processing. It argues that the recently withdrawn India’s Digital Competition Bill, 2024, as well as its European counterpart, fail to address the creation of derived data and the resulting information asymmetry that distorts market competition. The authors therefore advance a framework for regulating the conduct of SSDEs.

Arjun V Sunil

Agentic AI in Indian Financial Services: Regulatory Gaps in the PA Master Directions and the Case for Anticipatory Governance

June 22, 2026

Koushiik Kumar

Personality by Design: Claude’s Model Spec, Functional Emotions, and India’s Cybersecurity Accountability Vacuum

June 8, 2026

IJLT Editorial Team

May 2026: IJLT Tech-Law Bulletin

June 7, 2026

Aadit Anand, Sakshi Meena

India’s Anti-Avoidance Framework After Tiger Global: Why GAAR and JAAR Should not be Invoked Together

July 6, 2026

In Tiger Global, the Supreme Court permitted India's statutory GAAR and JAAR to operate in parallel to deny treaty benefits. This article argues that their simultaneous invocation is doctrinally unsound because it allows the Revenue to circumvent GAAR's procedural safeguards through the choice of forum. Drawing on comparative experience, it contends that even if JAAR survives, it must be confined to its traditional sham-only domain.

Prof. Benjamin Hayward

Appellate arbitration perspectives from India and Australia: The Draft Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Bill 2024 and the ACICA Arbitration Rules

May 16, 2026

Dhiren Gupta

The Assignment Paradox: Reconciling Personal Guarantor Liability with Debt Transfers under IBC Resolution Plans

April 28, 2026

Shrushti Mahesh Taori, Tatva Hemal Damania

“Click, Upload, Done!” – Has Uploading on the Portal Diluted the Meaning of ‘Service of Notice’?

April 21, 2026

Devanshi Shukla

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.

Anushka Aggarwal

A (Un)Precedented Shift? Legitimacy and the Rise of Standing Mechanisms in Investor-State Dispute Settlement

February 10, 2026

Sanyukta Chowdhury, Amit Chowdhury

The Monetary and Fiscal Mechanism

August 25, 2025

Ronjini Ray, Arnav Sharma, Dr. Harisankar K Sathyapalan, Dr. Saravanan A

Panel Presentations – Dispute Settlement in International Law @ 10th International Conference on International Law

July 24, 2025