Law and Social Change in India |
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Chief Justice Sinha , who delivered the dissenting judgment , was of the opinion that the right of excommunication or expulsion from the community was that the expelled person was excluded from the exercise of rights in connection not ...
Chief Justice Sinha , who delivered the dissenting judgment , was of the opinion that the right of excommunication or expulsion from the community was that the expelled person was excluded from the exercise of rights in connection not ...
202 ÆäÀÌÁö
S.P. Sahi113 is identical to the judgment in the Jagannath v . State of Orissa . 114 In both these cases the grounds of the judgments were practically speaking the same i.e. the collections were not merged in the general revenue and ...
S.P. Sahi113 is identical to the judgment in the Jagannath v . State of Orissa . 114 In both these cases the grounds of the judgments were practically speaking the same i.e. the collections were not merged in the general revenue and ...
296 ÆäÀÌÁö
The strong dissenting judgment of Sarkar , J. held that the right of pre - emption did not impose unreasonable restrictions on the right to acquire , hold and dispose of property . If the various courts had held the custom reasonable ...
The strong dissenting judgment of Sarkar , J. held that the right of pre - emption did not impose unreasonable restrictions on the right to acquire , hold and dispose of property . If the various courts had held the custom reasonable ...
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Preface | 11 |
Law and Social Change in India after the Post | 17 |
The Hindu Marriage Act 1955An Experiment | 36 |
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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 Hindu hold husband important India individual industrial institution interest judges judgment judicial Justice labour land legislation legislature living Madras marriage matter 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 change social legislation society Supreme Court taken temple term tion Union untouchability validity wages welfare wife women workers Workmen