Posts Tagged ‘indian’

Hart’s Concept of Law and the Indian Constitution

December 17th, 2009

Hart replaced the images of power and violence in jurisprudential imagination by conceiving law as a system of rules upon rules of social practices informed by their own criterion of validity and normative obligation. Before the advent of modern period legal theory was basically dominated by the natural law ideology which was the touchstone for testing the State law. In the modern period, Hobbes for the first time divorced positive law from natural law and made the State law independent of any external criteria. However, Hobbes did not fulfil the task of positivism fully as he did not distinguish between the actual law (“is law”) and the ideal law (“ought law”). His State-made law was not only an existing law but also an “ought” law. » Read more: Hart’s Concept of Law and the Indian Constitution

Law as Career

March 29th, 2009
Law as Career

LAW as career

 

Law as a profession is in great demand these days. Due to the changing economic and social scenario and the ever-increasing regulatory role being undertaken by the government there is a growing demand for the lawyers. Besides being financially lucrative, Law is an adventurous and thrilling career option.

Some of the personal characteristics that one needs to have to become » Read more: Law as Career