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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Competing Populisms: Public Interest Litigation and Political Society in Post-Emergency India

Bhuwania, Anuj January 2013 (has links)
This dissertation studies the politics of 'Public Interest Litigation' (PIL) in contemporary India. PIL is a unique jurisdiction initiated by the Indian Supreme Court in the aftermath of the Emergency of 1975-1977. Why did the Court's response to the crisis of the Emergency period have to take the form of PIL? I locate the history of PIL in India's postcolonial predicament, arguing that a Constitutional framework that mandated a statist agenda of social transformation provided the conditions of possibility for PIL to emerge. The post-Emergency era was the heyday of a new form of everyday politics that Partha Chatterjee has called 'political society'. I argue that PIL in its initial phase emerged as its judicial counterpart, and was even characterized as 'judicial populism'. However, PIL in its 21st century avatar has emerged as a bulwark against the operations of political society, often used as a powerful weapon against the same subaltern classes whose interests were so loudly championed by the initial cases of PIL. In the last decade, for instance, PIL has enabled the Indian appellate courts to function as a slum demolition machine, and a most effective one at that - even more successful than the Emergency regime. A recurring sentiment in these recent PIL cases is a deep impatience with the populism that is believed to characterize political life in India, and with the illegalities fostered by it. However, I argue that the enormous powers of PIL stem from its own populist character, which allows the appellate courts great flexibility in being able to maneouvre themselves into positions of overweening authority. With little or no procedure to regulate it, it is increasingly difficult to locate PIL within the conventional rubric of adjudicatory practice. With radical departures from legal norms that further empower the Courts, I argue, PIL has emerged as the vanishing point of jurisprudence. As a weapon of civil society, PIL appears to be a mere legal tool and therefore a classic example of associational activity. But it is really a mirror image of the populist contemporary politics it assails, just without any of the protections that populist political mobilisation regularly requires in a liberal democracy like India. Just as the practices of illegality rampant among India's white-collared denizens make its civil society uncontainable within any conventional notions of civic behaviour, its favourite weapon, PIL, too, has only a thin veneer of legality. The judicial populism of PIL allows for a radical instability that continually pushes the limits of what a court can do. This dissertation, after examining the why and the how of the rise of PIL, will focus on the most intensive laboratory of PIL in recent times - the city of Delhi. I foreground PIL's role in the radical reconfiguration of the city in the 2000s, and go on to critique the limitations of the existing critical discourses on PIL: their obliviousness to its materiality and their insistence on purely ideological and consequentialist understanding of recent trends in PIL. Lastly, I address the conundrum of the enduring appeal of 'debased informalism' in contemporary India, particularly the self-conscious and opportunistic adoption and celebration of it by the most formal of judicial institutions. If the Weberian account of the emergence of modern law was anything to go by, legalism's stock in India should have risen to its highest with the growth of capitalism in the post-liberalisation era. Instead 'legalism' has decisively acquired a negative connotation in India precisely in this same period. PIL is the most striking illustration of this peculiar historical trajectory.
2

環境污染司法救濟 :公益訴訟相關問題研究 = Environmental pollution relief : a study on the problems related to public interest litigation / Environmental pollution relief : a study on the problems related to public interest litigation;Study on the problems related to public interest litigation

周蘊佳 January 2018 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Law
3

檢察機關提起環境民事公益訴訟的相關問題研究 =Research on the relevant issues of environmental civil public interest litigation filed by procuratorial organ / Research on the relevant issues of environmental civil public interest litigation filed by procuratorial organ

方瑞安 January 2018 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Law
4

中國內地檢察機關提起民事公益訴訟適格性探析 =Locus standi of the procuratorial organs in civil public interest litigation in mainland China / Locus standi of the procuratorial organs in civil public interest litigation in mainland China

劉沛 January 2016 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Law
5

消費者團體訴訟制度研究 :以我國消費者團體訴訟制度構建為視角 = Research on consumer group litigation system based on the construction of the lawsuit system of consumer groups in Mainland China / Research on consumer group litigation system based on the construction of the lawsuit system of consumer groups in Mainland China;Research on consumer group litigation system : based on the construction of the lawsuit system of consumer groups in China;Based on the construction of the lawsuit system of consumer groups in China

潘柯丞 January 2018 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Law

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