Oxford handbook of the Indian Constitution
Oxford handbook of the Indian Constitution
Handbook of the Indian constitution Indian constitution
edited by Sujit Choudhry, Madhav Khosla, and Pratap Bhanu Mehta.
- London Oxford University Press 2016
- Oxford handbooks online .
- Oxford handbooks online. .
Previously issued in print: 2016.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Locating Indian Constitutionalism / Citizenship / Language / Elections / Emergency Powers / Constitutional Amendment / Separation of Powers / Legislature / Legislature / Executive / Judicial Architecture and Capacity / Constitutional Antecedents / Judicial Independence / Jurisdiction / The Administrative and Regulatory State / Tribunals / Review of Administrative Action / The Federal Scheme / Legislative Competence / Inter-State Trade, Commerce, and Intercourse / Inter-State River Water Disputes / Fiscal Federalism / Indian Constitutionalism / Asymmetric Federalism / Local Government / Rights: breadth, scope, and applicability / Horizontal Effect / Writs and Remedies / Saving Clauses: the Ninth Schedule and Articles 31A-C / Directive Principles of State Policy / Public Interest Litigation / The Constitutionalisation of Indian Private Law / Equality: legislative review under Article 14 / The Indian Founding / Reservations / Gender Equality / Life and Personal Liberty / Due Process / Criminal Law and the Constitution / Free Speech and Expression / Assembly and Association / Movement and Residence / Profession, Occupation, Trade, or Business / Secularism and Religious Freedom / Constitutional Interpretation / Personal Laws / Minority Educational Institutions / Property / Government Contracts / Sovereign Immunity / Public Employment and Service Law / The Indian Constitution Seen from Outside / Law, Politics, and Constitutional Hegemony / Constitutional Identity / Constitutional Change / International Law and the Constitutional Schema / Sujit Choudhry, Madhav Khosla, Pratap Bhanu Mehta -- Niraja Gopal Jayal -- Sujit Choudhry -- Aditya Sondhi -- Rahul Sagar -- Madhav Khosla -- Ruma Pal -- M. R. Madhavan -- Sidharth Chauhan -- Shubhankar Dam -- Nick Robinson -- Rohit De -- B. N. Srikrishna -- Raeesa Vakil -- T. V. Somanathan -- Arun Thiruvengadam -- Prateek Jalan, Ritin Rai -- Mahendra Pal Singh -- V. Niranjan -- Arvind Datar -- Harish Salve -- Nirvikar Singh -- Uday Mehta -- Louise Tillin -- K. C. Sivaramakrishnan -- Ananth Padmanabhan -- Stephen Gardbaum -- Gopal Subramanium -- Surya Deva -- Gautam Bhatia -- Shyam Divan -- Shyamkrishna Balganesh -- Tarunabh Khaitan -- Hanna Lerner -- Vinay Sitapati -- Ratna Kapur -- Anup Surendranath -- Abhinav Chandrachud -- Aparna Chandra, Mrinal Satish -- Lawrence Liang -- Menaka Guruswamy -- Anirudh Burman -- Vikramaditya Khanna -- Ronojoy Sen -- Chintan Chandrachud -- Flavia Agnes -- K. Vivek Reddy -- Namita Wahi -- Umakanth Varottil -- Neel Maitra -- Raju Ramachandran -- Mark Tushnet -- Upendra Baxi -- Gary Jeffrey Jacobsohn -- Shruti Rajagopalan -- Lavanya Rajamani.
This book explores the historical commitment to the idea of constitutionalism and how the framers understood India's constitutional project. It begins with an overview of the concept of 'constitutional morality' as it relates to the Indian Constitution, along with the cosmopolitan character of Indian constitutionalism. It then considers some of the tensions that have characterised constitutional law in India, with particular emphasis on some of the sources of these tensions, for instance the debate between centralisation and decentralisation. It also discusses the major axes around which the normative and institutional imagination of the Indian Constitution is articulated and concludes by analysing the character of constitutional development in India and paying attention to the forces that have shaped its evolution.
Specialized.
9780191774034 No price
Constitutional law--India.
KNS1750 / .O94 2017
Previously issued in print: 2016.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Locating Indian Constitutionalism / Citizenship / Language / Elections / Emergency Powers / Constitutional Amendment / Separation of Powers / Legislature / Legislature / Executive / Judicial Architecture and Capacity / Constitutional Antecedents / Judicial Independence / Jurisdiction / The Administrative and Regulatory State / Tribunals / Review of Administrative Action / The Federal Scheme / Legislative Competence / Inter-State Trade, Commerce, and Intercourse / Inter-State River Water Disputes / Fiscal Federalism / Indian Constitutionalism / Asymmetric Federalism / Local Government / Rights: breadth, scope, and applicability / Horizontal Effect / Writs and Remedies / Saving Clauses: the Ninth Schedule and Articles 31A-C / Directive Principles of State Policy / Public Interest Litigation / The Constitutionalisation of Indian Private Law / Equality: legislative review under Article 14 / The Indian Founding / Reservations / Gender Equality / Life and Personal Liberty / Due Process / Criminal Law and the Constitution / Free Speech and Expression / Assembly and Association / Movement and Residence / Profession, Occupation, Trade, or Business / Secularism and Religious Freedom / Constitutional Interpretation / Personal Laws / Minority Educational Institutions / Property / Government Contracts / Sovereign Immunity / Public Employment and Service Law / The Indian Constitution Seen from Outside / Law, Politics, and Constitutional Hegemony / Constitutional Identity / Constitutional Change / International Law and the Constitutional Schema / Sujit Choudhry, Madhav Khosla, Pratap Bhanu Mehta -- Niraja Gopal Jayal -- Sujit Choudhry -- Aditya Sondhi -- Rahul Sagar -- Madhav Khosla -- Ruma Pal -- M. R. Madhavan -- Sidharth Chauhan -- Shubhankar Dam -- Nick Robinson -- Rohit De -- B. N. Srikrishna -- Raeesa Vakil -- T. V. Somanathan -- Arun Thiruvengadam -- Prateek Jalan, Ritin Rai -- Mahendra Pal Singh -- V. Niranjan -- Arvind Datar -- Harish Salve -- Nirvikar Singh -- Uday Mehta -- Louise Tillin -- K. C. Sivaramakrishnan -- Ananth Padmanabhan -- Stephen Gardbaum -- Gopal Subramanium -- Surya Deva -- Gautam Bhatia -- Shyam Divan -- Shyamkrishna Balganesh -- Tarunabh Khaitan -- Hanna Lerner -- Vinay Sitapati -- Ratna Kapur -- Anup Surendranath -- Abhinav Chandrachud -- Aparna Chandra, Mrinal Satish -- Lawrence Liang -- Menaka Guruswamy -- Anirudh Burman -- Vikramaditya Khanna -- Ronojoy Sen -- Chintan Chandrachud -- Flavia Agnes -- K. Vivek Reddy -- Namita Wahi -- Umakanth Varottil -- Neel Maitra -- Raju Ramachandran -- Mark Tushnet -- Upendra Baxi -- Gary Jeffrey Jacobsohn -- Shruti Rajagopalan -- Lavanya Rajamani.
This book explores the historical commitment to the idea of constitutionalism and how the framers understood India's constitutional project. It begins with an overview of the concept of 'constitutional morality' as it relates to the Indian Constitution, along with the cosmopolitan character of Indian constitutionalism. It then considers some of the tensions that have characterised constitutional law in India, with particular emphasis on some of the sources of these tensions, for instance the debate between centralisation and decentralisation. It also discusses the major axes around which the normative and institutional imagination of the Indian Constitution is articulated and concludes by analysing the character of constitutional development in India and paying attention to the forces that have shaped its evolution.
Specialized.
9780191774034 No price
Constitutional law--India.
KNS1750 / .O94 2017