June 11, 2026

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When Terror Becomes Routine: A Critical Analysis of Section 113 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, and the Constitutional Risks of Mainstreaming Terrorism Law

Published on: 11th June 2026 Authored by: Isha Kumari ITM University, Raipur INTRODUCTION One can find a phrase often mentioned in the beginnings of the latest legal frameworks in India: the act of removing colonial influences. The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023[1] – which replaced the IPC of 1860 on July 1, 2024 – was built […]

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Close-up of a typewriter with the word Deepfake typed on paper. Concept of technology and media.

The Criminalisation of Deepfake Content in India: A New Legal Challenge in 2025

Published on: 11th June 2026 Authored by: Suyash Bisht Graphic Era Hill University Dehradun The way we talk to each other and have fun online has changed a lot because of intelligence.. One thing that is really scary about artificial intelligence is something called deepfake technology. Deepfakes are like videos or pictures that are made

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A Slippery Slope: How the 2026 Transgender Bill Breaks the Promise of Privacy

Published on: 11th June 2026 AUTHORED BY: PAIYYAVULA RAMYA NALSAR UNIVERSITY OF LAW INTRODUCTION The 2026 Amendment to the Transgender Bill1 raises urgent questions regarding the boundaries of state power and the preservation of individual freedom. One might ask why we should worry about this amendment or why understanding its implications is essential. To many,

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Impact of the New Criminal Laws: A Shift from the Indian Penal Code to the Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita.

Published on: 11th June 2026 Authored by: Swapnil Raj Chanakya National Law University INTRODUCTION: For more than 160 years, the framework of the Indian criminal justice system was built around three laws introduced during the British colonial period these were the, Indian Evidence Act (“IEA”), 1874, the Indian Penal Code (“IPC”), 1860 and the Criminal

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PASSIVE EUTHANASIA: CONSTITUTIONAL MORALITY REVAMPED

Published on: 11th June 2026 Authored by: Soumava Banerjee WBNUJS, Kolkata Abstract: From the revolutionary judgement of the Supreme Court on 25 January, 1978 in the Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978)[1], the ambit of one of the Fundamental Rights of the Golden Triangle, i.e., Article 21 has been widened many times to rationally

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