Roundtable on ‘Two Decades of Product Patents in India’ | By the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics and the Centre for Intellectual Property Research and Advocacy (CIPRA), NLSIU

The Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics and the Centre for Intellectual Property Research and Advocacy at the National Law School of India University are organising a roundtable on ‘Two Decades of Product Patents in India‘ on January 10, 2026.

Please note that the roundtable is open to the public. Participation in the Roundtable sessions is by invitation/registration only. Register here to attend.

About the Roundtable

The WTO Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) came into effect on January 1, 1995. As per Art. 27 of the TRIPS Agreement, patents shall be available for any inventions, whether products or processes, in all fields of technology, provided that they are new, involve an inventive step and are capable of industrial application. Some of the developing countries, including India, were not granting product patents in some areas like pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals, at the time of signing of the agreement. In fact, many scholars have pointed out that the specific exclusion of product patents in the area of pharmaceuticals in the Patents Act 1970 has contributed substantially to the blooming of generic pharmaceutical companies in India, and thereby also making India a pharmacy of the world. However, as a signatory to the TRIPS Agreement, India was forced to reintroduce product patents in the area of pharmaceuticals. By virtue of Article 65.4, India got 10 years to comply with the TRIPS requirements in this regard, and the Patents (Amendment) Act, 2005, India made the necessary changes in this area.

As the year 2025 marks 20 years of India re-introducing a product patent regime in the area of pharmaceuticals, the half-day roundtable seeks to review in detail the key changes that may have happened in the area.

Schedule

I. Introduction by Dr. Arul George Scaria (Professor of Law, NLSIU) | 9.30-9.35 am

II. Session 1 | 9:40-11:00 am
Moderator: Dr. Arul George Scaria
Panellists:
(i) Ms. Jayashree Watal (Former Counsellor, WTO) – Historical Perspectives
(ii) Ms. Vindhya S. Mani (Partner, Technology Law Division, Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan, Attorneys, Bengaluru) – Approach of the Judiciary
(iii) Dr. Kalyan C Kankanala (Managing Partner, BananaIP Counsels) – Approach of the Patent Office

III. Tea Break | 11.00-11.30 am

IV. Session 2 | 11:30 am – 13:30 pm
Moderator: Bhanu Tanwar (Assistant Professor of Law and Co-Director, Centre for Health Law and Ethics, NLSIU)
Panellists:
(i) Ms. Archana Jatkar (Associate Secretary General, Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance) – Industry Perspectives
(ii) Mr. K. M. Gopakumar (Senior Researcher and Legal Advisor, Third World Network) – Civil Society Perspectives
(iii)Dr. Zakir Thomas (Founding Project Director, OSDD) – Innovation within the Indian Pharmaceutical Industry

V. Vote of thanks by Bhanu Tanwar

The NLS Public Lecture Series | ‘Temporary Lives: Law, Ruination, And The Right To Dwell In Lagos’ | By Daniel E. Agbiboa, Harvard University

The National Law School of India University is organising a public lecture on ‘Temporary Lives: Law, Ruination, And The Right To Dwell In Lagos’ by Daniel E. Agbiboa, John & Ruth Hazel Associate Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University on January 12, 2026.

Temporary Lives: Law, Ruination, And The Right To Dwell In Lagos

Across the Global South, urban eviction is increasingly justified in the language of climate adaptation, risk management, and development. Drawing on Agbiboa’s book-in-progress, ‘Dredged Lives: Futures and Foreclosures in an African City,’ this talk examines how such rationales operate in Lagos, Nigeria, where waterfront communities are routinely demolished in the name of  environmental safety, urban renewal, or megacity ambition. Agbiboa argues that these clearances are not failures of governance but deliberate techniques of rule. They take the form of self devouring growth and bureaucratic violence that convert land into speculative value by  rendering certain lives temporary.

Focussing on precarious waterfront communities, Agbiboa traces how law functions less as protection and more as performance. Court orders are ignored, notices are withheld, and legality is retroactively rewritten. In this context, eviction is not an exception but a governing rationality. Risk becomes an alibi, informality a weapon, and uncertainty itself a mode of control.

The talk also examines how residents insist on presence through staying put, rebuilding on rubble, mapping themselves into visibility, and crafting alternative plans for urban life, even when legal remedies fail. These practices constitute what Agbiboa calls ‘refusal without redemption,’ a politics oriented not toward final resolution but toward present-oriented survival and the  labor of carrying on regardless.

By bringing Lagos into conversation with broader debates on climate urbanism, law, displacement, and urban citizenship, the talk invites reflection on a pressing question for legal scholarship. What does justice look like when law itself governs through dispossession, and what forms of political life persist when redemption through law is no longer available?

About the Speaker

Daniel E. Agbiboa is Associate Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University, where he also serves as Faculty Associate of the Weatherhead Centre for International Affairs, Affiliate Faculty of the Bloomberg Centre for Cities, and Co-Chair of the Urban Conversation Series in the Mahindra Humanities Center.

Prof. Agbiboa’s research focuses on the intersection of violence and order, urban governance, mobility and mobilisation, environmental politics, empire and African subjectivity. His works are grounded in discourse analysis, mobile ethnography, and a critical ethnography of the state. He is the author of They Eat Our Sweat: Transport Labor, Corruption and Everyday Survival in Urban Nigeria (Oxford University Press, 2022) and Mobility, Mobilisation and Counter/Insurgency: The Routes of Terror in an African Context; editor of Transport, Transgression and Politics in African Cities: The Rhythm of Chaos (Routledge, 2019); and co-editor of People, Predicaments and Potentials in Africa (Langaa RPCIG).

He is the recipient of several prestigious (book and article) awards, including the Lee Ann Fujii Book Award given by the International Studies Association (ISA); the ISA Peace Best Book Award; finalist for both the Society for Economic Anthropology (SEA) Best Book Prize and the Global Development Studies (GDS) Best Book Award; the Politics and Gender Best Article Award given by editors of Politics and Gender journal (published by Cambridge University Press) and the Women, Gender and Politics Section of APSA; and the 2023 James F. Short Jr. Distinguished Article Award (Honorable Mention) given by the Crime, Law and Deviance Section of the American Sociological Association. In 2023, Professor Agbiboa received the Clarence Stone Scholar Award, given by the Urban and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA) for his significant contributions to the study of urban politics. He has been a member of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, fellow of the Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars, recipient of the Guggenheim Distinguished Scholar Award, and holder of the CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholar Award (2024-2026). He currently serves on the Editorial Board of the African Studies Review and the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, where he also serves as a Trustee.

‘AI In The Everyday In India’ | A Socio Legal Workshop by the JSW Centre for the Future of Law at NLSIU, University of Amsterdam, Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of Warwick, and Tilburg University

The JSW Centre for the Future of Law at NLSIU, along with University of Amsterdam, Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of Warwick, and Tilburg University, is organising a socio-legal workshop titled ‘AI in the everyday in India’ on Saturday, January 10, 2026.

This event is open to the public, register here to attend.

Concept Note

AI and the Everyday in India brings together scholars working on everyday negotiations with AI enabled algorithmic governance in policing, surveillance of public places, welfare provisions, control of borders in the Indian context marked by either the absence of legal, regulatory frameworks or gaps between the law and lived realities of experiences with AI.

The workshop will generate conceptual frameworks and methodological tools for studying AI and the everyday in a comparative perspective that considers generalisable similarities even while being mindful of the unique histories and socio-political dynamics that shape the implementation and reception of AI technologies in India. The discussions will develop the network of scholars exploring the everyday life of AI in the global south.

Programme

10.00 – 10.15 am: Introduction and Welcome
Siddharth de Souza, Sagnik Dutta, Rahul Hemrajani, and Siddharth M

10.15 am – 12.15 pm: AI related challenges to democracy and justice
Chair: Rahul Hemrajani
Discussants: Sagnik Dutta and Siddharth M

  • Antecedents as Precedents? Exploring the Interoperable Criminal Justice System (ICJS) in India – Nupur Chowdhury
  • Law, Ethics, and AI in Urban Traffic Enforcement: The Case Study of Delhi NCR of India – Rajesh Kumar
  • Watching the Republic: A Critical Policy Analysis of AI-Enabled Government Surveillance in India – Nikhil Purohit
  • Democratic Backsliding in the Global Majority: Wading Through the Swamp of AI Slop – Anmol Diwan

12.15 – 1.15: Lunch

1.15 – 3.45 pm: Governance, Human rights and Infrastructures of AI
Chair:
Siddharth de Souza
Discussants: Rahul Hemrajani and Siddharth M

  • When Infrastructure becomes Governance: Rethinking Law’s Role in India’s Digital health Project – Anamika Kundu
  • Ecologies of AI in India – Preeti Raghunath and Suriya Krishna B S
  • ‘Who’ is involved in governing AI in India and ‘how’?: The role of state and non-state actors – Devyani Pande
  • AI and Human Rights: A posthuman conundrum – Manpreet Singh
  • Inclusion, Innovation and AI in/for Law in India’ – Krishna Ravi Srinivas

3.45 – 4.00 pm: Tea and coffee

4.00 – 6.00 pm: Imaginations and futures of AI
Chair:
Sagnik Dutta
Discussants: Siddharth de Souza and Rahul Hemrajani

  • From Assembly to Algorithm: Constitutional Intelligibility and Self-Respect in the Age of AI – Shaunna Rodrigues
  • The Masculine Rhythm of Algorithmic Solutions and the Future of Collective Political Imagination – Debangana Chatterjee
  • Decolonising AI Personhood: Designing a Framework for the Future – Shrawani Shagun and Sanchet Sharma
  • Building AI Futures from Below: Centering youth voices to build equitable and accountable AI – Bhawna Parmar

6.00 – 6.30 pm: Conclusion
Siddharth M, Rahul Hemrajani, Sagnik Dutta and Siddharth de Souza

NLS Comes to Kochi | Open House | NLS BA (Hons) Programme

We invite curious and interested students, parents, schools, and career counsellors, to the open house on the NLS BA (Hons) programme at Kochi on Saturday, January 17, 2026.

This conversation will revolve around BA education and practice, focussing on the multidisciplinary curriculum and pedagogy of what NLS has to offer in this programme. The session will be hosted from 11 am to 1 pm. It is intended to guide students in their Class XI and XII in making an informed decision about their higher education journey.

The open house will be conducted by our faculty members Dr. Anindita Adhikari, NLS BA (Hons) Vice Chair and Assistant Professor of Social Science, and Dr. Megha Sharma, Assistant Professor of Social Science.

Kindly register ahead for the open house by filling out this form.

About the NLS BA (Hons) Programme

NLSIU pioneered and developed an integrated 5-year BA LLB (Hons.) degree that transformed Indian legal education. Several NLS graduates have pursued further degrees in humanities, social sciences, and business and then embarked on very successful careers in these fields.

As NLSIU develops into a multi-disciplinary university, in line with national and state education policies, the NLS BA (Hons.) programme draws on 35 years of experience in offering the integrated 5-year BA LLB (Hons.) programme. The NLS BA (Hons.) programme curriculum has been carefully designed by faculty teams after extensive stakeholder consultations with eminent academics and practitioners from across the country’s top universities to provide their inputs and advice on the curriculum.

Our faculty come from leading universities within India and beyond. We have faculty strength in the following areas:

  • History: Modern South Asia, Urban History, Labour History, Global History, Post-Independent India, Development and Planning, Indian National Movement (19th and 20th century)
  • Politics: Western Political Thought, Tagore, Gandhi, Periyar and Indian Political Thought, Political Economy, Urban Politics, Land, Indigeneity, Political Parties, The Indian State and Democracy, Comparative Methods in Political Research
  • Sociology and Anthropology: Social Theory, Caste and Tribe, Capitalisms, Development, Land Politics, Cinema and Popular Culture, Religion, Urban Anthropology, Ecology
  • Economics: Development Economics, Environmental Economics, Labour Economics, Econometrics, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, History of Economic Thought, Game Theory

Our faculty have rich research agendas and publication records across law and the social sciences which will inform classroom teaching and learning.

Read more about the programme.

Reflections from the ‘PPEL in the Global South’ Conference | Dec 11-14, 2025

The annual conference ‘PPEL in the Global South,’ focussed on Philosophy, Politics, Economics, and Law, was held from December 11-14, 2025 at the NLSIU campus. The primary objective of the conference was to provide a visible platform for scholars from India and other regions of the Global South to engage in sustained dialogue with peers from across the world. It also aimed to contribute to building a coherent intellectual community in India across philosophy, law, political theory, economics, and related disciplines.

About the Conference

The conference brought together 65 participants from universities across India, South Asia, Southeast Asia, North America, Europe, the UK, and Australia. A total of 59 papers were presented across 22 thematically organised panels. Panel themes included, among others, AI and Ethics, Free Speech, Structural Wrongs and Power, New Directions in Law, Constitutional Law in the Global South, Economic Competition and Exploitation, and Rethinking Political Theory in India.

Reflecting the objectives of the conference, participants represented diverse career stages as well as institutional and disciplinary backgrounds. The conference included 15 PhD scholars and participants from 23 Indian universities and 28 universities abroad, spanning the Global North and South. In addition, two special sessions were organised for NLSIU students on Navigating Academic Careers and Writing and Publishing in philosophy, the social sciences, and law. Several NLSIU faculty members participated as presenters and moderators, alongside students, particularly from the BA and BA LL.B. programmes, who were actively involved as student organisers.

The final day of the conference featured an open roundtable discussion on the outcomes and future directions of the PPEL network. Participants agreed to establish a formal mailing list to sustain the network, organise a series of smaller workshops in both online and offline formats, and initiate a mentorship programme involving early-career and senior scholars. The possibility of special journal issues based on thematic groupings of conference papers was also discussed.

Overall, the philosophical anchoring of the conference enabled dialogue among participants from diverse disciplinary backgrounds and affirmed the importance of collaborative and interdisciplinary research across philosophy, politics, economics, and law.

Gallery

Live Information Sessions | NLSAT Programmes | January 2026

NLSIU is conducting live information sessions during January 2026 on the NLS BA (Hons.), the 3-Year LL.B. (Hons.), the Master’s Programme in Public Policy (MPP) and the PhD programmes. These online sessions will provide information about the University, the structure of the respective programmes and the application process.

Here are the details of the sessions (in order of the upcoming events):

Master’s Programme in Public Policy (MPP)

January 7, 2026 | 6 PM  – 7 PM | Webinar on Careers in Public Policy
Speakers:
1. Dr. Srikrishna Ayyangar, MPP Chair and Associate Professor, Social Science, NLSIU
2. Dr. Devyani Pande, MPP Vice-Chair and Assistant Professor, Public Policy. NLSIU

Register for the Webinar

PhD Programmes 

January 8, 2026 | 6 PM  – 7 PM
Speakers:
1. Dr. Arul Scaria, PhD Chair and Professor of Law
2. Dr. Shiuli Vanaja, PhD Vice-Chair and Assistant Professor, Social Science

Register for the Webinar

Admissions Open

Admissions are currently open for the above-mentioned programmes. To apply, visit nlsatadmissions.nls.ac.in.

For any queries regarding NLSAT, write to .

We look forward to meeting you at these sessions!

Guest Lecture | ‘Hidden Precarities: Debt and Embodied Risk in Urban Uttarakhand, India’ | By Dr. Smitha Radhakrishnan, Wellesley College

The HUPA Chair on Urban Poor and the Law at NLSIU is organising a talk on ‘Hidden Precarities: Debt and Embodied Risk in Urban Uttarakhand, India’ by Dr. Smitha Radhakrishnan from Wellesley College, US, on January 8, 2026.

About the Speaker

Dr. Smitha Radhakrishnan is the Marion Butler McLean Professor in the History of Ideas and Professor of Sociology at Wellesley College in the United States. She is the author most recently of Making Women Pay: Microfinance in Urban India (2022) and The Gender Order of Neoliberalism (with Cinzia D. Solari, 2023). An award-winning feminist sociologist focussed on questions of finance, development, and labour, Dr. Radhakrishnan is currently studying household debt and moneylending in the contexts of India, South Africa, and the United States.

About the Talk

How might the experiences of low wage workers in contemporary India clarify conceptualisations of precarity developed primarily in global North contexts? This paper departs from an employment-oriented understanding of precarity to center the bodies and narratives of men and women workers who take loans in order to make ends meet. Drawing from 188 interviews with low-wage workers in the highly financialised state of Uttarakhand, India, we conceptualise precarity as embodied risk. We identify a continuum of embodied risk resulting from a combination of formal and informal loans, ranging from mental strain to the loss of belongings to ill health or premature death. Leveraging a social reproduction framework sensitive to caste and gender, we find that workers experience intensified embodied risk when taking high-interest loans from private moneylenders to meet pressing expenses, a phenomenon known as distress financing. Our analysis first examines how informal and formal loans accessible to low wage workers put the bodies of workers on the line in different ways. Then, through a close examination of a subset of workers, we explore the key mechanisms through which borrowing intensifies embodied risk for some workers and their families more than others. Caste, gender, household composition, and migrant status, all intersect to shape embodied risk. This intersectional understanding of precarity draws attention to the constitutive links between moneylending, financialisation, and social reproduction in contemporary India. We call for both state-led and community-led efforts to shore up diverse forms of social protection.

Faculty Seminar | Disputing the State: Redeeming rights though state-backed claim-making in India

In this week’s faculty seminar, Dr. Anindita Adhikari, Assistant Professor, Social Science, will be presenting her paper titled ‘Disputing the State: Redeeming rights though state-backed claim-making in India’ on December 24, 2025.

Abstract

There is considerable consensus amongst socio-legal scholars that for social rights to be realised the law must be pursued beyond courts, through local institutions and that local structures of claim-making, beyond litigation, are needed. However, accounts of how national rights regimes are embedded in and supported by local structures and actors and how the expanded institutional terrain of the state triggers rights claims, is not as well understood. This article focusses on a novel reform in India, called social audits, which are a set of legally backed forums and procedures that induce welfare-based claims and complaints. This article argues that these forums for claim-making have expanded the downward reach of the state and by taking on the costs of social rights mobilisation, have invited an unprecedented increase in formal claim-making. The article identifies the logics of state-backed claim making to explain how social rights can be claimed even in contexts with extreme social exclusion and patrimonial bureaucratic cultures. It provides valuable insights into the infrastructural support needed not just for vernacularising the law but to transform the vernacular of claim-making itself.

Guest Lecture | ‘Role of Insurance in Merger and Acquisition Transactions’ | By Adoksh Shastry, AZB & Partners

The Reliance Chair on Corporate Law and Governance at NLSIU organised a guest lecture on the ‘Role of Insurance in Merger and Acquisition Transactions’ by Adoksh Shastry, Partner, AZB & Partners on December 24, 2025.

Key Concepts

  • Introduction to Warranty & Indemnity (W&I) insurance
  • Role and use of W&I insurance in M&A transactions
  • Basic terms and features of W&I insurance
  • Typical structures around insurance deals and timelines
  • Exclusions, inclusions and scope of W&I insurance
  • Claims process and impact on clients in M&A transactions
  • Case studies and transaction specific examples
  • Tax insurance and its role in M&A transactions

About the Speaker

Mr. Adoksh Shastry is a Partner at AZB and Partners (Bengaluru Office), in the Corporate/ Mergers and Acquisitions practice group of the firm. With over a decade of experience with the firm and the team, his key practice areas include Capital Markets, Mergers and Acquisitions, Private Equity and Venture Capital, Regulatory & Securities, E-commerce & Retail, FinTech & Digital, Microfinance, etc.

Alumni Reunion | Celebrating 20 Years | BA LLB (Hons) Class of 2005

We were glad to host a campus reunion for the BA LLB (Hons) class of 2005 on Saturday, December 20, 2025, as they celebrated 20 years of their graduation from NLSIU, Bengaluru.

Our alumni spent the day on campus re-connecting with batchmates, faculty, and other members of the NLS community, and celebrating their friendships and connections over the decades.

Schedule

11:00 am – 11:30 am: Arrival at OAB 104
11:30 am – 12:50 pm: Welcome Address + Batch Interactions
12:50 pm – 1:00 pm: Group Photograph Session
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm: Lunch (Training Centre)
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm: Campus & Library Walk
3:00 pm – 3:30 pm: Interaction with current students

A Walk Down Memory Lane