Law and Social Change in IndiaDeep & Deep, 1983 - 431ÆäÀÌÁö |
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... institution must be established only for the members of the minority com- munity . " The real import of Article 29 ( 2 ) and Article 30 ( 1 ) seems to us to be that they clearly contemplate a minority institution with a sprinkling of ...
... institution must be established only for the members of the minority com- munity . " The real import of Article 29 ( 2 ) and Article 30 ( 1 ) seems to us to be that they clearly contemplate a minority institution with a sprinkling of ...
213 ÆäÀÌÁö
... institution . 4. At the same time , the state or any university authority cannot under the cover or garb of adopting regulatory measures tend to destroy the administrative autonomy of the institution or start interfering willy nilly ...
... institution . 4. At the same time , the state or any university authority cannot under the cover or garb of adopting regulatory measures tend to destroy the administrative autonomy of the institution or start interfering willy nilly ...
215 ÆäÀÌÁö
... institution or the com- mittees constituted by them . Where a minority institution is affiliated to a University the fact that it is enjoyed to adopt the courses of study or the syllabi or the nature of the books prescribed and the ...
... institution or the com- mittees constituted by them . Where a minority institution is affiliated to a University the fact that it is enjoyed to adopt the courses of study or the syllabi or the nature of the books prescribed and the ...
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Preface | 11 |
Law and Social Change in India after the Post | 17 |
Social Legislation and Criminal Sanctions | 25 |
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Amendment amount applied areas Article backward classes Bombay bonus caste citizens classes clause Commission compensation consideration considered Constitution decision determined economic educational effect employer enacted equality established existing fact follows force freedom fundamental further give given Government ground held High Hindu hold husband important India individual industrial institution interest judges judgment judicial Justice labour land legislation legislature living Madras marriage matters means ment minority moral nature necessary object observed offence particular parties person pointed political practice Prevention principles prostitution protection provisions question reasonable referred reform regard Regulation relating religion religious Removal Report reservation restrictions result rule Scheduled secular secure separation social social legislation society Supreme Court taken temple term tion Union untouchability validity wages welfare wife women workers workmen