What’s in a name? – how changing a name enables human rights violations

Donald Guadagni Names are used as vehicles by State actors to polarize public opinion, and to vilify segments of both the indigenous and foreign populations to achieve a political end or justify State actions against groups by casting the groups into a light that will not garner sympathy, nor illicit public aid and thus, enabling … Continue reading What’s in a name? – how changing a name enables human rights violations

When Human Rights and Psychology Meet

Dr. Deepa Kansra According to many scholars, the human rights instruments of international, regional, and domestic systems have sparked a large and growing number of empirical and interdisciplinary studies. The fields of psychology, anthropology, economics, history, political science, development studies, for instance, have added great vigor to the different human rights frameworks and their application. The interface … Continue reading When Human Rights and Psychology Meet

“Balancing” Dissent, Protest and Urban Mobility: The Shaheen Bagh Judgment

This piece is written by Shrutanjaya Bhardwaj. The author is an advocate practicing in Delhi and Sonipat. He is a graduate of National Law University, Delhi and holds an LL.M. degree from the University of Michigan Law School where his focus areas of study were constitutional law, media law and human rights In the Shaheen … Continue reading “Balancing” Dissent, Protest and Urban Mobility: The Shaheen Bagh Judgment

Contemplating ‘Socrates’ and ‘Education Fee’ in the times of a Pandemic

This article is authored by Ashit Kumar Srivastava, an Assistant Professor of Law at National Law University, Jabalpur. In the recent times of this pandemic, with economy taking a plunge, a lot many vital questions are surfacing before us. However, among the lot, the question of ‘Education Fee’ in the times of this pandemic has … Continue reading Contemplating ‘Socrates’ and ‘Education Fee’ in the times of a Pandemic