‘Content Moderation – From Social Media Platforms To AI Chatbots: What is the Legal and Technological Framework? By Prof. Julia Hörnle | JSW Centre for the Future of Law

The JSW Centre for the Future of Law at NLSIU is organising a talk and discussion on the topic, “Content Moderation – From Social Media Platforms to AI Chatbots: What is the Legal and Technological Framework?” by Julia Hörnle, Professor of Internet Law at Queen Mary, University of London.

  • Day & date: Monday, April 27, 2026
  • Time: 2:00 – 3:00 PM
  • Venue: Allen and Overy Hall, National Law School of India University (NLSIU) Campus 

The Talk is open to the public with mandatory registration here.

About the Speaker

Julia Hörnle, is Professor of Internet Law at Queen Mary, University of London. She has held the Chair of Internet Law at the Centre for Commercial Law Studies at Queen Mary, University of London since 2013.

Her research areas are Cyberspace Law & Digital Rights, Internet Regulation, Jurisdiction of States Online and Online Dispute Resolution. She examines from a critical-analytical perspective the law related to the internet, cloud computing, social media and artificial intelligence. Her recent research focusses on the regulation of social media, the liability of intermediaries for user-generated content, and the use of artificial intelligence for content moderation online.

She has held visiting research and teaching positions at the at the Max Planck Institute for International and Comparative Criminal Law, at the Institute for Telecommunications and Media Law, University of Münster, at the European University Institute, Singapore Management University, the National University of Singapore and Georgetown University Washington DC.

She was educated at the University of Göttingen, the University of Leeds (1995) and the University of Hamburg, Germany (1996). She trained with the law firm of Eversheds in London and Brussels and qualified as a solicitor in 1999. She gained a University of London PhD in 2008. Read more.

 

Alumni Reunion | BA LLB Class of 2015

The National Law School of India University is excited to host a campus reunion for the BA LLB (Hons) batch of 2015 on Saturday, April 25, 2026 as they celebrate 10 years of their graduation from the University.

Our alumni will be spending the day on campus re-connecting with batchmates, faculty, and other members of the NLS community, and celebrating their friendships and connections over a decade.

Schedule

  • 11:00 am – 11:30 am: Arrival
  • 11:30 am – 11:45 am: Welcome Address
  • 11:45 am – 12:15 pm: Batch interaction
  • 12:15 pm – 1:00pm: Interaction with students
  • 1:00 pm – 1:10 pm: Group Photo Session
  • 1:10 pm – 2:30 pm: Lunch (Training Centre)
  • 2:30 pm onwards: Campus Walk

‘The Ethics and Morality of Indian Politics’ | 6th Sri. Hunasikote Abdul Ghaffar Annual Memorial Lecture

The Centre for the Study of Social Inclusion (CSSI), at the National Law School of India University (NLSIU), Bengaluru is organising the 6th Sri. Hunasikote Abdul Ghaffar Annual Memorial Lecture on April 17, 2026, at 5.10 PM. The lecture will be delivered by Dr. Narendar Pani, Professor at the National Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS), Bengaluru on the topic ‘The Ethics and Morality of Indian Politics’.

About the Lecture Series

This memorial lecture was initiated by the Institute of Public Policy with the support of Prof. Adbul Aziz, Chair on Religious Minorities, NLSIU in memory of his father Sri. Hunasikote Abdul Ghaffar. Mr. Ghaffar passed away in 1982 in Hunasikote at the age of 74.

The first lecture in this series was delivered by Prof. Karkala Seetharam on April 3, 2019 on the topic “Human Rights as Public Policy.”

About the Speaker

Dr. Narendar Pani is a Professor at the National Institute of Advanced Studies, where he is also the Dean of the School of Social Sciences and Heads the Inequality and Human Development Programme. After a doctorate in economics, he moved into transdisciplinary research which allowed him to explore diverse, but interconnected, aspects of Indian reality. His work over the last four decades has ranged from agrarian reform to urban processes, confronting challenges of the method along the way. His books include “Inclusive Economics: Gandhian Method and Contemporary Policy” and “The City as Action: Retheorizing Urban Studies” (forthcoming).

Conference on ‘Addressing the Contract Labour System and Contractualisation of Workforce’ | By Centre for Labour Studies, NLSIU

The Centre for Labour Studies (CLS) at NLSIU is organising a day-long conference on Addressing the Contract Labour System and Contractualisation of Workforce as per the details below:

  • Day & date: Saturday, April 11, 2026
  • Time: 10:00 AM to 5:30 PM
  • Venue: Conference Hall, Training Centre, NLSIU

Open to the public Register here.

The conference will bring together leading scholars, trade union representatives, lawyers, and workers to examine the rapid expansion of contract labour in India and its implications for job quality, labour rights, and social equity.

Session Details 

Session 1:  The Political Economy and Working of Contract Labour in India (10:30 to 12:30 PM)

Across the world, standard forms of employment – characterised by secure tenure, formal contracts, and access to social security – are steadily declining. In their place, non-standard forms of employment such as contractual work and gig-based work are expanding rapidly. In the Global South, including India, such forms of employment have long been widespread. However, the growing reliance on contract labour – one of the most prominent forms of non-standard employment – raises important questions about job quality and workers’ rights.

Governments and employers frequently justify the use of contract labour as essential for flexibility, productivity, and employment generation, often claiming that rigid labour laws limit firms’ ability to grow. Yet research suggests that contract employment is also used to weaken the bargaining power of permanent workers and reduce labour costs. The Economic Survey 2015–16 observed that states with more rigid labour laws actually witnessed faster growth in contract labour, challenging the claim that labour flexibility alone explains this expansion.

Evidence shows deep inequalities between regular and contract workers. A study by V.V. Giri found that contract workers in private establishments earned only 68% of the wages of regular workers, while in public employment they earned just 45%, highlighting substantial wage gaps. Contract workers also face limited access to creches, canteens, and social security, while hiring practices reflect sharp caste and gender biases, with women disproportionately employed in low-paying contractual roles such as housekeeping and sweeping.

Despite these challenges, workers and unions have resisted through strikes, protests, and legal interventions, sometimes achieving regularisation. Yet the overall trend remains concerning: the 2022-23 Enterprise Survey reports that 43% of Central Public Sector employees are contract workers, up from 19% in 2015, while the Annual Survey of Industries (2021-22) shows 40% of industrial workers are contract-based.

This panel will bring together workers, union leaders, and economists to explore the realities of contract labour in India. It will examine structural inequalities and forms of resistance, providing a critical overview that sets the stage for subsequent discussions on conditions of work, labour jurisprudence, and pathways for strengthening workers’ rights and protections.

Speakers:

  • Rajesh Jospeh, Azim Premji University
  • Ramadevi, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike Pourakarmika Union
  • Vijayakumar,  HAL Contract Workers’ Association
  • Karuna Dietrich Wielenga, Azim Premji University
  • Maitreyi Krishnan, AICCTU (Moderator)

Session 2: Occupational Safety, Health, and Working Conditions Code (OSH Code) and Contract Labour (12:45PM to 1:45PM)

In 2025, the Union Government notified four labour codes, consolidating and replacing a wide range of labour laws that had governed workers’ rights for over a century. Among the laws subsumed was the Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970, which, despite its limitations, had provided an important framework for regulating contract labour. Under the new Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSH) Code, many of these protections have been significantly weakened.

The OSH Code raises the threshold for its applicability, narrows the scope of regulation, and allows the use of contract labour even in core and permanent activities. It specifically keeps out certain works from the definition of core and permanent work, and these include works performed by historically marginalized sections of society.

The OSH Code also reduces certain employer liabilities toward workers. Collectively, these changes raise serious concerns about the future of decent work, job security, and workplace protections for contract workers.

This panel will examine in detail the implications of the newly enacted OSH Code for workers, highlight its differences from the previous legal framework, and discuss its potential impact on judicial interpretations and the broader jurisprudence of labour law.

Speakers:

  • Meenakshi Sundaram, CITU
  • Maitreyi Krishnan, AICCTU
  • Saurabh Bhattacharjee, Center for Labour Studies, NLSIU (Moderator)

Session 3: Contract Labour and the Courts: The Evolving Jurisprudence of Regularisation (2:30PM to 3: 45 PM)

For over a quarter of a century, an important part of labour’s struggle against contractualisation has unfolded in the courts, particularly before the Supreme Court and various High Courts across India. In disputes concerning both public and private employment, the judiciary has often been the final forum where workers seek recognition of their claims for regularisation.

Two landmark judgments frequently cited as restricting the rights of contract workers are Steel Authority of India Ltd. v. National Union Waterfront Workers (2001) and Secretary, State of Karnataka v. Uma Devi (2006). In the first case, the Supreme Court held that contract workers do not have an automatic right to absorption into permanent employment. In the second, the Court ruled that the regularisation of ad hoc or temporary employees could amount to granting “backdoor entry” into government service, thereby significantly narrowing the scope for regularisation.

In the years since these decisions, however, courts – including the Supreme Court – have revisited and interpreted aspects of these rulings in more nuanced ways. Judgments such as Jaggo v. Union of India, Shirpal & Another v. Nagar Nigam Ghaziabad, and the recent decision in Dharam Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh have softened some of the rigid implications of earlier rulings. These decisions have carved out limited exceptions and created some space for recognising the rights of daily-wage and contractual workers.

At the same time, the legal terrain continues to evolve. A case currently pending before the Supreme Court, Oil and Natural Gas Corporation v. Krishnan Gopal, raises the important question of whether labour and industrial courts have the authority to order regularisation when there are no sanctioned posts.

This panel seeks to unpack the complex and contested jurisprudence surrounding contract labour through a discussion of key court decisions. Bringing together labour lawyers and trade union leaders, it will examine how courts currently approach demands for regularisation and what these developments mean for workers’ struggles today.

Speakers:

  • Sudha Bharadwaj, Trade Unionist and Labour Lawyer, High Court of Bombay
  • Muralidhara, Labour Lawyer, High Court of Karnataka
  • Saurabh Bhattacharjee, Center for Labour Studies, NLSIU
  • Avani Chokshi, AICCTU (Moderator)

Session 4: Contract Labour after the Labour Codes: Regulation and Path Forward (4PM to 5:30PM)

Despite the notification of the four labour codes by the Union Government, considerable ambiguity persists regarding their implementation. Many State Governments are currently in the process of formulating and notifying rules to operationalise these codes, while also considering alternative measures including passing state-specific legislation to address potential adverse impacts. This includes introducing additional legal protections for workers who may be excluded from the scope of the new framework.

Such state-level interventions are not unprecedented; under the earlier labour regime, states such as Tamil Nadu and Assam enacted laws providing for the regularization of workers after a defined period of service – protections that are not uniformly available to workers in other states across the country.

In this context, the panel aims to bring together representatives from the judiciary, trade unions, workers, and academia to reflect on the implications of the new legal framework governing contract labour and to discuss possible responses to the challenges it presents including considering the proposal to submit a bill on the regularization of employment to the Government of Karnataka. The panel will also briefly examine and deliberate on provisions in the model law on regularisation drafted for submission to the Karnataka Government.

Speakers:

  • VJK Nair, CITU
  • Clifton D’ Rozario, AICCTU
  • Babu Mathew, AITUC (Moderator)

Film Screenings and Session with Paromita Vohra | By NLS Law and Society Archives & NLS Feminist Alliance

The NLS Law and Society Archives, in collaboration with the NLS Feminist Alliance (NLSFA), is organising screenings of two films by Paromita Vohra as per the details below:

Screening of Working Girls

  • Day & date: Friday, April 17, 2026
  • Time: 5:00 PM
  • Venue: Allen & Overy Hall, NLSIU

(Open to the public with mandatory registration here.) 

The screening will be followed by a discussion with the filmmaker, offering an opportunity to reflect on the film’s themes and its wider feminist and political stakes.

About Working Girls

Working Girls is a vivid, genre-defying film that travels across India to uncover the invisible, yet essential labour performed by women. Moving through Kolkata, Mumbai, Shillong, Latur, Thiruvananthapuram, Hyderabad and Madurai, the film brings us into the lives of domestic workers, farmers, ASHA workers, dancers, mothers, sex workers, and organisers whose work sustains society but is rarely recognised.

Blending sharp humour, rich music, and a deep engagement with law, gender, and history, the film challenges dominant ideas of labour, value, and visibility. Created in collaboration with the Laws of Social Reproduction Project based at The Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London, the film invites us to rethink what it means to work and who gets to be seen as a worker.

In the run-up to the public screening, there will be a showcase of another of Paromita’s films:

Screening of Unlimited Girls 

  • Day & date: Wednesday, April 15, 2026
  • Time: 7:30 PM
  • Venue: NAB 102, NLSIU

(Open only to the NLS Community) 

About Unlimited Girls (2002):

The landmark documentary by Paromita Vohra, Unlimited Girls is a sharp, playful, and incisive exploration of feminism, media, and popular culture in urban India. Blending documentary with satire, it captures the contradictions, aspirations, and negotiations that shape young women’s lives, making it as relevant today as when it was first released. Watch the trailer here.

The second screening will take place as per the details below:

About the Filmmaker

Paromita Vohra is a filmmaker and writer whose work spans documentaries, television, digital media, and art installations. Her films, including Unlimited GirlsQ2PWhere’s Sandra?Morality TV and the Loving Jehad, and Partners in Crime, are known for their sharp feminist insight, wit, and formal experimentation. She has also written for cinema, including Khamosh Pani (Silent Waters), and created the comic Priya’s Mirror and the play Ishqiya Dharavi Ishtyle.

In 2015, she founded Agents of Ishq, a pioneering digital platform that has transformed conversations on sex, love, and desire in India. Across her work, Vohra brings together humour, critique, and a deeply sensuous engagement with questions of gender, labour, and everyday life. She has edited Love, Sex And India: The Agents Of Ishq Anthology (Context, 2026) Her weekly column Paronormal Activity ran for 15 years in the Sunday Midday.

NLS Faculty Seminar | The Trial Process Becomes Very Alien: Lawyers’ Imagination of the Legal Process in Contemporary Delhi

This week’s faculty seminar featured presentation by Dr. Mayur R Suresh, University Research Fellow, NLSIU on ‘The Trial Process Becomes Very Alien: Lawyers’ Imagination of the Legal Process in Contemporary Delhi.’ The paper has been co-authored by Fariya Yesmin and Lubhyathi Rangarajan.

Abstract

How do lawyers understand legality in contemporary India? The authors examine the experiences of lawyers in Delhi, who defend people accused under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), statutes increasingly deployed to target dissent and minority groups. Drawing on in-depth interviews, these trials produce a sense of normlessness — where foundational assumptions about rules, processes, and institutional roles collapse.

Lawyers describe an “alien” legal world marked by unpredictability, an absence of established procedure, and blurred boundaries between judges, prosecutors, and police. While ordinary cases retain a sense of normality, UAPA and PMLA cases destabilise imaginations of the legal process, compelling lawyers to speculate on motives and majoritarian influences. The authors explore how lawyers respond through insistence on procedural norms and strategies to mitigate harm to clients. These narratives illuminate the transformation of legality into a contingent, shape-shifting form of power, challenging deterministic accounts of authoritarian legality.

Photo gallery 

Play Reading | ‘Sorry, Wrong Number’ by Lucille Fletcher | The Green Room

The student-led theatre effort at NLS, The Green Room, is organising a reading of the play ‘Sorry, Wrong Number‘ by Lucille Fletcher as per the details below:

Day & Date: Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Time: 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM
Venue: NAB 205

The Green Room is a nod to the intimate, lively backstage space in theatres where artists gather before a performance. This session will be a table read followed by a discussion.

About the Play

Sorry, Wrong Number follows Mrs. Stevenson, a bedridden woman, who accidentally overhears a telephone conversation plotting a murder. As she desperately tries to alert the authorities and piece together the details, her attempts are met with indifference and delay. What unfolds is a gripping narrative driven entirely by voice and sound, where isolation, helplessness, and time itself become sources of terror.

The play’s brilliance lies in its use of limited perspective to heighten suspense, drawing attention to vulnerability within seemingly ordinary, domestic spaces. While this is a radio play, which relies primarily on sound and music to build tension and atmosphere, we will use it to illustrate how theatre extends beyond the physical stage and encompasses a range of mediums through which performance can be experienced.

Here is the link to the play.

About the Author

Lucille Fletcher (1912–2000) was an American screenwriter and playwright, best known for her mastery of suspense and psychological drama. Originally written as a radio play, Sorry, Wrong Number remains one of the most celebrated works in the genre, showcasing her ability to build tension through voice, pacing, and atmosphere.

Open to all NLS Community, whether you would like to read a role or simply listen and join the discussion.

‘Why did a Rule on Mandatory Prescription of Generic Drugs Fail in India?’ By Prashant Reddy | JSW Centre for the Future of Law

As part of its monthly workshops, the JSW Centre for the Future of Law at NLSIU is organising a workshop on April 22, 2026, from 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM (IST) with Prashant Reddy T. Prashant will discuss, “Why did a Rule on Mandatory Prescription of Generic Drugs Fail in India?”

The online workshop is open to the public. To attend, kindly register here (Microsoft Teams).

Abstract:

For a long time now, India has been known as the ‘pharmacy of the world’ for its expertise in manufacturing affordable generic drugs. Yet when the National Medical Commission in 2023, made it mandatory for all doctors in India to prescribe drugs only by their generic names instead of their brand names, Indian doctors vehemently protested against the rule, leading to its rollback in a matter of few weeks. In particular, the Indian Medical Association (IMA) claimed that its doctors lacked confidence in the quality of generic drugs being sold in India. What explains this sharp contrast in the global perception of the Indian pharmaceutical industry as a manufacturer of quality generic drugs and the refusal of Indian doctors to prescribe all generic drugs? The answer probably lies in the fact that the Indian industry is regulated by two different legal systems – one in the developed world which has evolved rigorous quality norms over decades and the other is the Indian regulatory framework under the Drugs & Cosmetics Act, 1940 which has failed to keep up with global standards. In this talk, the speaker, Prashant Reddy Thikkavarapu, Co-author of The Truth Pill: The Myth of Drug Regulation in India (2022), will discuss why Indian law has failed to instil confidence amongst Indian doctors in the quality of generic drugs sold in India.

About the Speaker

Prashant Reddy T. holds degrees in law at undergraduate and postgraduate levels from the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru (BA LLB 2008) and Stanford Law School, Stanford respectively. He has experience working in litigation, academia, and think-tank spaces in India and Singapore. His larger oeuvre spans drug regulation, intellectual property, judicial reforms and transparency law. He is the co-author of The Truth Pill: The Myth of Drug Regulation in India (2022), a widely noted examination of India’s pharmaceutical regulatory system. He has also co-authored Create, Copy, Disrupt: India’s Intellectual Property Dilemmas (2017) and Tareekh Pe Justice: Reforms for India’s District Courts (2025), and writes extensively in the public fora on questions of law, policy, and institutional accountability.

Play Screening | ‘Romeo and Juliet’ by William Shakespeare | The Green Room

The student-led theatre effort at NLS, The Green Room, is organising a screening of ‘Romeo and Juliet‘ by William Shakespeare, presented as part of the National Theatre production as per the details below:

Day & Date: Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Time: 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM
Venue: NAB 205

The Green Room is a nod to the intimate, lively backstage space in theatres where artists gather before a performance. The screening will be followed by an open discussion. 

About the Play

Set in Verona, Romeo and Juliet unfolds against the backdrop of a bitter feud between two noble families. Amid this hostility, Romeo and Juliet fall into an intense, secret love that defies social boundaries. Their attempt to carve out a private world of passion is gradually undone by violence and rigid codes of honour. Shakespeare traces how youthful idealism and impulsiveness become entangled with forces beyond their control, leading to tragic and irreversible consequences.

What gives the play its enduring force is its exploration of love in tension with social structures. It reveals how deeply personal desires are shaped, and often constrained, by family, honour, and circumstance, capturing both the transcendence and fragility of idealism in an unforgiving world.

Here is the link to its trailer.

About the Production

This screening features the National Theatre’s original film, a bold reimagining that brings Shakespeare’s tragedy into the remarkable backstage spaces of the theatre itself. Blurring the lines between performance and process, the film uses these unconventional settings to heighten the intimacy and urgency of the story, allowing desire and destiny to unfold in striking new ways. The production stars Jessie Buckley [Academy Award winner for Hamnet] as Juliet and Josh O’Connor as Romeo.

NLS Faculty Seminar | Colonial Legacies, Institutions, and Conservation: Forest Rights among the Gonds and Korkus in Madhya Pradesh, India

This week’s faculty seminar featured presentation by Dr. Shiuli Vanaja, Assistant Professor, Social Science, NLSIU on ‘Colonial Legacies, Institutions, and Conservation: Forest Rights among the Gonds and Korkus in Madhya Pradesh, India.’ The paper has been co-authored by Deep Jyoti Francis, Science Policy Expert and Independent Researcher.

Abstract

India’s tribal (indigenous) communities have lived in and cared for its forests for generations. For them, forests are not just resources; they are home, livelihood, culture, and faith. Yet, these very communities are often displaced and labelled as threats to conservation because of formal institutional structure consisting of laws and policies rooted in colonial model of fortress conservation.

Within these communities, there also exists an informal institutional structure consisting of social norms and customary cultural practices that govern the interaction of tribals with forests.

Using qualitative data collected from 23 villages in Narmadapuram (old name Hoshangabad) and Betul districts of Madhya Pradesh, the authors study the relationship between forests and two tribal groups of this region, Gonds and Korkus. They explore the interplay between formal institutional structure which puts forests as state property under control of forest department with informal structure in which accessing forests is a fundamental part of life for tribals irrespective of who owns it legally.

They examine the linkages between the colonial era property rights to forests and conservation policy with the current injustices faced by tribals along with non-recognition of their forest rights. Their findings show that even after years of displacement and exclusion by the state, tribal communities continue to care for and protect their forests. But formal laws and weak implementation of community rights under the Forest Rights Act 2006 leave them insecure, forcing them to navigate fines, bribes, and alienation from their own lands. This paper argues for a shift away from top-down, exclusionary conservation model toward a more just, community-led model that respects Indigenous knowledge and rights, strengthens their role as custodians of the forest, and works with them rather than against them to protect forests.

Photo gallery