Email: sabrangind@gmail.com
Three Years of the Congress Government
A People’s Critique: Expectations and Disillusionments
When Rape and Violence become the Battleground for Communal Identities
Television and social media discourse over the past one...
Prashant Kanojia’s illegal arrest by UP police is telling of a govt bent on gag orders
Prashant Kanojia, an independent journalist, was arrested by the...
Can Modi Win “Sabka Vishwas”? Did Modi implement Sabka Sath Sabka Vikas?
After 2014 victory Modi, Prime Minister of India had...
Sangh Parivar Works Against Dalits, Attempted to Defeat Me: Dr. Thol Thirumavalavan
Sabrang -
Dr. Thol Thirumavalavan says that the communal forces like...
The “massive mandate” of 2019 and the role of the Election Commission
This is the elephant in the room, is it...
New MHA order gives Assam FTs unspecified and unprecedented powers
On May 30, 2019, the Ministry of Home Affairs...
Two years after Mandsaur killing, farmers continue to protest to get justice
Mandsaur: On the second anniversary of the Mandsaur firing,...
The Strange Political Case of Bengal – The rise of BJP at the cost of Communist Ideologies
The Bharatiya Janata party has returned to power with...
A Transformative Agenda For India’s New Government
Rs 18,000 as assured monthly income for farmers or...
Patanjali’s Benami Land?
Sabrang -
Recently, in a report in the Business Standard, journalists Nitin...
Related VIDEOS
ALL STORIES
ALL STORIES
Environment
Himalayan Courts: Young folds & new cracks in environmental jurisprudence
This third part of a careful and exhaustive legal analysis looks at the environmental jurisprudence of the Himalayan High Courts over the last decade that reveals an unsettling paradox: the vocabulary of ecological protection has never been richer, yet the physical landscape has never been more legally vulnerable. The courts of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh have masterfully preserved the text of environmental law while pronouncing judgements that blunt its teeth.
Rights
Bhodu Sekh Case: Union agrees before Supreme Court to repatriate deported Bengali-speaking individuals pending citizenship inquiry
Union tells Court those sent to Bangladesh will be brought back and their citizenship claims examined in India; clarifies decision is confined to the exceptional facts of the case
Communalism
Have Hindus always been Vegetarian?
The author academic exposes the propaganda in what he terms as the “Hindutva Hoax of Vegetarian Hinduism”
Rule of Law
J&K High Court quashes preventive detention in cattle transport case, says PSA cannot substitute ordinary criminal law
Court holds allegations relating to cattle transportation and offences under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act concern “law and order” at best, and do not justify preventive detention under the Jammu & Kashmir Public Safety Act
Rule of Law
Supreme Court refers UAPA bail jurisprudence to larger bench; grants interim bail to Tasleem Ahmed and Khalid Saifi in Delhi riots conspiracy case
Court says K.A. Najeeb cannot be reduced either to a “mathematical formula” mandating bail solely due to delay or to a hollow constitutional safeguard overridden entirely by Section 43D(5) of the UAPA
Rule of Law
Andrabi Judgment: Section 43D(5) UAPA cannot override right to speedy trial, restores primacy of Article 21 in UAPA cases
The judgment restores the constitutional framework laid down in KA Najeeb and cautions against treating anti-terror bail restrictions as a basis for indefinite pre-trial detention
Environment
Environmental Jurisprudence: The Bombay High Court’s shifting language
Part II turns its attention to Western India: Mumbai, the rest of Maharashtra, and the long shadow of the Western Ghats where from sound coastal-zone jurisprudence, the High Court has been asked to, and has, permitted successive ‘infrastructure’ projects that have touched coasts, mangroves and the urban forest.
Labour
Noida Protest 2026: A labour uprising the state refused to understand
The protests that paralysed Noida’s industrial belt in April 2026 exposed not only worsening labour conditions but also the growing tendency of the state to treat democratic labour mobilisation as a law-and-order problem
