02651nam a22002177a 450000500170000000800410001702000180005804000070007604100080008308200140009110000240010524500310012925000060016026000310016630000320019736500590022952020780028865000190236665000310238570000170241620260422164932.0250314b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a9788119403134 cAL aeng a342bJAIM aMahavir Prasad Jain aIndian Constitutional Law  a9 aGurgaonbLexis Nexisc2025 accxxii,2081p.bPBc24x18cm. 2Lawa7313b1836.00c₹d2295.00e₹f20%g07-03-2025 aM P Jain’s Indian Constitutional Law is an authoritative and, classic treatise on Indian constitutional law. This book, presently in its Ninth edition, is a thematic presentation of the complex and multi-dimensional discipline of Indian Constitutional law in a lucid, comprehensive and systematic manner. This edition delves into both the initial applications and modern interpretations of the Constitution of India. The book also takes note of the rich stream of contemporary jurisprudence with focus on areas like disability rights, intersectionality, and indirect discrimination, as well as evolving constitutional principles like Fiscal federalism, transformative constitutionalism and constitutional morality. It is an important reference for the Bench and the Bar; students and teachers; public intellectuals and media folks; bureaucrats and Politicians; and social movement entrepreneurs alike. Key Features: Thoroghly revised with the commentary on recent constitutional amendments and Supreme Court and High Court jurisprudence Analysis of doctrines like Transformative Constitutionalism, Constitutional Morality, Populist Constitutionalism, Constitutional silence, Unenumerated rights, Basic Structure, Accommodative Society, etc. Includes comprehensive commentary on concepts like privacy rights, abortion, and the right to be forgotten, criminalization of Triple Talaq, decolonization of criminal laws, relationship between the Central and State governments, Indirect discrimination, Intersectionality, Reasonable accommodation, Doctrine of Proportionality, etc In-depth and critical engagement with the impact of recent jurisprudence of Supreme Court in domains like electoral bond, Sub-classification amongst SC/ST, Modification of Article 370, Scope of Parliamentary privileges, Same Sex Marriage, Appointment of Election Commissioners, Royalty and Tax and Taxing powers of States, Scope of cultural and educational rights under Article 29-30, etc. Critical Reflections on contemporary scholarship in Indian Public Law and comparative Constitutional Law aFederal System aPolitical and Civil Rights aJain, Sanjay