The Juvenile Justice Care and Protection of Children Act 2015 ensures a child-friendly approach in handling the matters of “children in children in children in conflict with the law” and those children who must be looked after and protected.
By JusCorpus Blogs
The evidence laws have been modernised, streamlined, and made simpler by the “Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023”, replacing the “Indian Evidence Act of 1872”. Although many of the provisions of the IEA are still included in the BSA, they have been updated and improved.
By JusCorpus Blogs
India is a Union of States, where the powers are delimited between the Centre and States by the Constitution itself. The powers of the legislature are divided according to three lists namely: Union, State and Concurrent List, under which states and the centre can make laws within the scope of matters covered under their respective lists.