Trademarks in India: A Brief Overview
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
Introduction Trademark is a branch of intellectual property rights. Intellectual property rights permit people to maintain ownership rights of their innovative product and creative activity. Intellectual property came to light because of the efforts of human labour, so it is limited by a number of charges for the registration and charges for infringement. Types of intellectual property are Trademarks, Copyright Act, Patent Act, and Designs Act. A trademark is an intellectual property that is depicted as a visual symbol, label, sign or design in order to represent a product by a manufacturer. I ..read more
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Empowerment of Transgenders: Chattisgarh Opens Doors of Police Force
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
This article is written by Vaibhav Goyal, student at University Institute of Legal Studies, Panjab University. People will sometimes put each other in boxes and have biases toward one another because of what they look like or where they come from or who they are. Rich Moore There is a segment of our general public containing people; regularly seen moving on streets, asking for offerings, and in some cases showing up excluded to relationships and birth occasions, showering gifts of good wellbeing and life span in a trade for cash. A similar community, which is generally dreaded for its ‘influe ..read more
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Idea of Secularism in the Indian Constitution: Emerging Challenges under Constitutional Law
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
This article is written by Khushboo, student at Geeta Institute of Law, Panipat. Secularism is a belief system that rejects religion, or the belief of Religion should not be part of the affairs of the state or part of public relation. India has struggled in terms of forming a secular society with a neoliberal state that has practically destroyed the legitimacy of the shared echoes, superseding it with aggressive animal spirits. Since the country embarked on the might of the congress party & the rise of right-wing politics, jingoistic favour in part coinciding with the rolling back of a w ..read more
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Concept of Fair Trial under CrPC, 1973
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
Introduction The Fair Trial is one of the cornerstone of a just society. Without fair trials, innocent people are convicted and the rule of law and public faith in the justice system collapses. It is a key role of any Government to maintain Law and Order on behalf of the whole society. In a Democratic society, even the rights of the accused are sacrosanct. The rationale of ‘fair trial’ means that people can be sure that the process will be fair and certain; it prevents Government from abusing its powers. In Zahira Habibullah Sheikh and Ors. v. State of Gujarat and Ors[1], the Supreme Court of ..read more
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Preparation Strategy & Sources For CLAT PG
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
This is a Guest Post by Mr. Harshit Sharma, Trainee Civil Judge-cum-Judicial Magistrate, Rajasthan [Rajasthan Judicial Services Exam 2018], AIR-68, DJS, 2019, AIR-15 & 23 CLAT PG- 2019 & 2020, NET Qualified, Doctoral Candidate PhD at NLU-J Subject/Topic-wise List of Books: • Pillai or R&D for IPC, • Poonam Pradhan on Family and Property Law, • Avtar Singh or Bangia for Contract • Bangia or R&D for Torts • I.P Massey on Administrative Law • A.K. Jain (Ducci) Part –I & II for Constitution • A.K. Jain or Salmond for Jurisprudence • A.K. Jain for Public International Law • For ..read more
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100 Years Of The Communist Party of China: Foundation History
The LawKit
by Konain Imtiyaz
3y ago
This article is written by Vaibhav Goyal, student at University Institute of Legal Studies, Panjab University. A revolution is not a dinner party, nor a literary composition, nor painting nor embroidering. It cannot be done so delicately, so leisurely, so gentlemanly and gently, kindly, politely and modestly. Revolution is an insurrection, the violent action of one class overthrowing the power of another. An agrarian revolution is a revolution by the peasantry to overthrow the power of the feudal landlord class. If the peasants do not apply great force, the power of the landlords, built up ov ..read more
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Concept of Wages: Definition & Classification under Labour Law
The LawKit
by Moiz
3y ago
Introduction A wage is monetary compensation (or remuneration, personnel expenses, labour) paid by an employer to an employee in exchange for work done. Payment may be calculated as a fixed amount for each task completed (a task wage or piece rate), or at an hourly or daily rate (wage labour), or based on an easily measured quantity of work done. Wages are part of the expenses that are involved in running a business. Payment by wage contrasts with salaried work, in which the employer pays an arranged amount at steady intervals (such as a week or month) regardless of hours worked, with the com ..read more
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Conversation with Ms. Aashna Jain, Founder- Career Solutions by Aashna Jain, Former Associate- SAM, Dua Associates, NLU-J Graduate (2018)
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
Interviewed by Maaz Akhtar Hashmi Hello Ma’am! How would you like to introduce yourself? Hello, I am Aashna Jain and I hail from Chandigarh. Since I have studied in Jodhpur for 5 years, I like to call Jodhpur my second home. If I go on to talk about my family, my mother is a Chartered Accountant by qualification and an Educationist by profession. She owns, manages and runs two schools. My father is also a Chartered Accountant and lawyer by qualification but his interest lies in his tax and ED practice. Further, a bit sneak peek into my hobbies would tell you that I am a reader. I can literally ..read more
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Sabrimala Temple: A Conflict Between Law & Religion
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
This article is written by Khushboo, student at Geeta Institute of Law, Panipat. Abstract In a country like India, the right to freedom of religion of both individuals and groups is an intrinsic feature, the reason that it is conferred upon its citizen’s liberal democracy. This freedom is recognized under Articles 25 and 26 of The Constitution of India. Article 25 gives the citizens the right to freely practice, profess and propagate any religion subject to common exceptions of public order, morality and health, and also, essentially to the guarantee of other fundamental rights. Article 25(2 ..read more
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Organized Illegality in the Republic of India
The LawKit
by Admin
3y ago
This article is written by Dalima Poojari, student at National Forensic Sciences University, Gujarat. An organised crime aligns through the national frontier, including groups or markets of a specific person operating in different countries to plan and implement illicit business activities. To obtain their targets, these delinquent groups use massive violations and corruption. From a criminological point of view, the idea of ‘transnational criminality’ originated from the mid-1970s although the United Nations used the word to recognize certain illicit activities that surpass national authoriti ..read more
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