Annual Law School Blood Donation Camp | August 13, 2025

The 2nd Edition of the Annual Law School Blood Donation Camp is being held on campus on August 13, 2025. This camp is being organised by NLS students in collaboration with Sankalp India Foundation. The camp will be held from 1:30 pm to 6 pm in the Moot Court Hall, Old Academic Block.

This camp is open to all members of the NLS community – students, faculty and staff.

About the camp

Potential donors will go through preliminary tests before donating. Refreshments will be arranged for the donors following the donation, and each of them will be given a certificate acknowledging their effort.

The first edition of the the camp was conducted last year on August 7, 2024. A total of 78 units of blood were donated through this camp. One unit contained either 350 ml or 450 ml of blood, with 350 ml being collected from first-time donors and 450 ml being collected from those who have donated blood earlier.

The camp was organised in collaboration with Sankalp India Foundation, a non-profit organisation working primarily for the cause of Children with Thalassemia. Sankalp has conducted eight such blood donation camps at NLS since 2014, collecting a total of 340 units of blood. Sankalp screens all blood units for various diseases before it is used for transfusion.

For more information, contact Mr. Abhinav Somani at .

Stakeholder Consultation on Legal Protection for Domestic Workers | By Centre for Labour Studies, NLSIU & Human Rights Collective

The Human Rights Collective and the Centre for Labour Studies at NLSIU, in collaboration with the Domestic Workers Union and Stree Jagruti Samiti, are organising a day-long Stakeholder Consultation on Legal Protection for Domestic Workers, to be held in hybrid mode, on August 2, 2025, at the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru, from 10 am to 5 pm.

This consultation forms part of an ongoing initiative aimed at bringing together diverse perspectives to formulate a legal framework for domestic workers within India.

Please note: The consultation is open only to the NLS community and invitees. It will be held in hybrid mode. Non-NLS attendees may join online. RSVP to receive the online link.

View the Schedule

About the Consultation

The impetus for this consultation has been significantly influenced by the Supreme Court’s judgment in Ajay Malik v. State of Uttarakhand [2025 INSC 118]. This judgment mandated the establishment of a national committee to propose legislative measures for domestic workers. Despite this directive, no such committee has yet been constituted.

In response to this, the Human Rights Collective at NLSIU, in partnership with the Centre for Labour Studies, NLSIU, Domestic Workers Union and the Stree Jagruti Samiti, has initiated a series of independent consultations. These consultations are designed to foreground worker experiences and address existing legal gaps. As part of this effort, the team has prepared a position paper critically analysing the current legal landscape and conducted a worker consultation in Bengaluru on July 16, 2025, with a follow-up consultation with union leaders on July 19, 2025.

NLS Faculty Seminar | ‘Fair Play in the Digital Infrastructural Era’

In this week’s faculty seminar, Bharath Gururagavendran, Assistant Professor of Law, presented his paper titled ‘Fair Play in the Digital Infrastructural Era.’ The seminar was held on July 30, 2025, in the Ground Floor Conference Hall at NLSIU’s Training Centre.

Abstract

This paper interrogates the normative architecture of digital public infrastructures (DPIs) through a fair play (FP) analysis, arguing that contemporary data-driven welfare schemes, though formally consent-based, optimal, and aligned with prevailing accounts of the FP principle, nonetheless misallocate burdens and benefits and generate distinct semiotic harms that urge retheorisation of FP. Developing Uṭal Nalam Tiṭṭam (UNT), a fictional healthcare infrastructure modelled on India’s Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, the paper examines how such schemes disproportionately compel data contributions from structurally disadvantaged users while legitimising opt-outs by more privileged participants. Through stylised case studies embedded within UNT (Farmer, Consultant, Compassionate Lawyer), it asks whether, and under what conditions, refusals to contribute constitute wrongful free riding, and whether schemes that are formally voluntary but functionally coercive can satisfy the requirements of fair play. Methodologically, the paper adopts a diagnostic approach grounded in political theory and institutional analysis.

The argument proceeds in two parts. First, it applies the FP principle to contemporary DPI regimes (as instantiated in UNT), drawing on formal accounts developed by Rawls, Cullity, Tosi, Trifan, and Brown. Second, it reverses the lens, using UNT to show how the institutional logic of digital infrastructures unsettles core assumptions in these accounts. It demonstrates how algorithmic and infrastructural design embeds normative claims about public value and fairness in ways that constrain exit, deepen dependence, and distort the terms of consent, reciprocity, and political obligation. Contra Tosi, the paper challenges the view that FP applies only to interactions governed by the express rules of cooperative schemes, revealing how background conditions shape participation in ways that undermine voluntariness and skew burden distribution. Contra Brown, it questions whether reciprocity-based obligations can remain discretionary in schemes that unequally structure agents’ capacity to choose. The paper argues that UNT fails both the justice and acceptance conditions of FP: it compels the least powerful to surrender privacy for access, while affording the affluent and digitally literate, a normatively unexamined right to abstain. Crucially, the paper contends that this asymmetry is not merely distributive or instrumental, but expressive. It erodes the normative foundations of cooperation itself. It concludes by identifying conceptual blind spots that demand a re-theorisation of fair play attuned to the design logics of digital governance.

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Book Talks@NLS Library | ‘Queer Judgements’ | With QAMRA and Queer Judgments Project

NLSIU’s Queer Archive for Memory Reflection and Activism (QAMRA) in collaboration with the Queer Judgements Project (QJP), are hosting a book discussion at the NLS Library on ‘Queer Judgements,’ an edited collection which was published by Counterpress in January 2025.

The book discussion will be moderated by Dr. Siddharth Narrain, Faculty Director, QAMRA Archival Project, NLSIU, with panellists:

  • Vinay Chandran, Executive Director, Swabhava Trust
  • Aishwarya Birla, Assistant Professor of Law, NLSIU
  • Raju Behara, Researcher, Queer Judgements Project
  • Deedee, Impact Consultant
  • Radhika Chitkara, Assistant Professor of Law, NLSIU

QAMRA will also be displaying a small part of its collections for attendees to engage with at the NLS Library.

Registration is mandatory for visitors from outside the NLS community. You can register for the talk here.

Abstract

The Queer Judgments Project is an initiative that evolved from disparate conversations between the current co-editors about how legal judgments related to sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics could have been written in different terms in light of relevant legal frameworks. This project brings together friends, colleagues, scholars, and activists who are interested in improving and challenging the law and its application to make life better for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer and other minoritized people and communities.

This edited collection is the first output of the project and the pages of this book re-imagine, re-write and re-invent judgments, from queer and other complementing perspectives. With an international reach and multi-disciplinary scope, this edited collection invites you to a queer dance through 26 judgments and commentaries.

About QJP

The Queer Judgments Project is an initiative that evolved from disparate conversations between the current co-editors about how legal judgments related to sexual orientation, gender identity and expression and sex characteristics (SOGIESC) could have been written in more appropriate terms in light of the legal framework at the time. We wanted to cultivate a project that brought together friends, colleagues, and activists who were interested in improving and challenging the law and its application to make life better for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer and other (LGBTIQ+) people and communities.

The main aim of the project is to re-imagine, re-write, re-invent, from queer and other complementing perspectives, judgments that have considered SOGIESC issues.

The project has an international reach and multi-disciplinary scope. Thus, individual contributors are free to choose which judgment they want to focus on, featuring voices from across the globe. Similarly, the audience is to include people outside of academia, marginalised people and young people.

About the Speakers

Vinay Chandran

Vinay Chandran is the Executive Director of Swabhava Trust, a non-governmental organisation in Bengalurur. Established in 1999, Swabhava works on providing access to support services for LGBTQIA+ populations. Swabhava’s programmes include the Sahaya Telephone Helpline (080-22230959), documentation and research, training and workshops, and support spaces for various LGBTQIA+ groups. Vinay is a peer counsellor on the Helpline and set up the projects in Swabhava. His research on healthcare perspectives on SOGI communities has been published (co-edited by Arvind Narrain) in Nothing to Fix: Medicalisation of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SAGE/Yoda Press, 2015). He is currently working on a follow-up book on healthcare discrimination in southern India.

Aishwarya Birla

Aishwarya joined NLSIU in 2022 as an Academic Fellow, and now works as Assistant Professor of Law at NLSIU and Research Associate for the Pluralist Agreement and Constitutional Transformation (PACT) project. Her broad interests include human rights law, anti-discrimination, refugee law, and constitutional law.

 

Raju Behara

Raju is a non-binary disabled poet and expressive arts practitioner whose work centers queerness, disability, and anti-caste resistance through hybrid forms like blackout and found poetry. Their practice focuses on chronicling and re-imagining erased histories of queer-trans communities via community-led initiatives, including a trans-led expressive arts cohort with the Piravi Art Community. In 2022, they initiated Redefining Queerscapes, a movement using workshops to transform legal texts into protest poetry, archived in the Queer Judgments Project, Reframe Journal and multiple anthologies. Their debut collection, Withering Tempests (2021), explores queer isolation, and their writings on queer-trans journeys in urban spaces in India appears in journals and queer collectives. As an EQUAL fellow and a collaborator with the Asia Pacific Trans Network, Raju documented systemic healthcare barriers faced by trans youth and led Queer & Quarantine, a crisis-intervention initiative, during the pandemic.

Deedee

Deedee is an independent impact consultant supporting Trans- and Women-led organisations across India. Her work is grounded in feminist, anti-caste, and anti-colonial frameworks. She previously served as South Asia Co-Leader at Ashoka Young Changemakers, a Washington D.C.-based organisation known for pioneering the field of social entrepreneurship. An experienced organizer and fundraiser, she has mobilized over $1 million and trained 10,000+ students and educators on the relationship between Empathy and Power in everyday praxis. Deedee holds a Philosophy degree from the University of Delhi, where she also partnered with the Vice Chancellor’s office to advance inclusive student leadership.

Radhika Chitkara

Radhika is an Assistant Professor of Law at NLSIU, Bengaluru, where she is also pursuing her PhD on “Policing Terror: A Legal Cartography of Institutions, Powers and Functions” as Dr. NR Madhav Menon Doctoral Scholar and a grantee of the Law and Social Transformation Grant administered by DAAD-UGC. She is an Editor of the National Law School Journal, and has over twelve years of experience as a human rights scholar and practitioner. Her research interests include policing and civil liberties, gender, and indigenous peoples’ rights.

Muse@NLS Library | ‘Rain Incarnations’ | Poetry Reading With Prof. Bishnu Mohapatra

NLSIU’s Library Committee is organising a poetry reading by Prof. (Dr.) Bishnu N. Mohapatra, Professor of Politics and Director of Moturi Satyanarayana Centre for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences, KREA University.

Prof. Mohapatra will be reading from his volume of poetry titled Rain Incarnations.

The reading will take place at the NLS Library Basement on Monday, 4 August 2025, at 4 PM.

About the poet

Prof. Bishnu Mohapatra is a well-known Indian poet who writes his poetry in Odia. Currently, he is a Professor of Politics and the Director of Moturi Satyanarayana Centre for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences at KREA University, Sri City, Andhra Pradesh, India. He served as the regional anchor of India and South Asia for the World Humanities Report (WHR), published in 2024.

Prof. Mohapatra has authored five volumes of poetry and has translated two volumes of Pablo Neruda’s poetry into Odia. A Fragile World, a book of his poetry in English translation, was published in 2008. He served as the national jury member for the Moortidevi Award of Bharatiya Jnanpith, Delhi, from 2013 to 2015. A volume of his poetry in Hindi translation – Buddha aur Aam – was published by Pralek Prakashan, Mumbai, in 2022. Prof. Mohapatra’s poetry carries not only a theorist’s critical gaze but, more importantly, a seeker’s voice. In terms of great uncertainty and disenchantment, his poetry seeks to re-enchant the world without drowning out contemporary realities.

A volume of his poetry in translation – Rain Incarnations – was published by Speaking Tiger in 2025. He is in the process of completing a volume of Rilke’s poetry in Odia translation.

About the Event

Ammel Sharon, Assistant Professor, Social Science, NLSIU will be in conversation with Prof. Mohapatra, and Keertana Venkatesh, Assistant Professor, Law, NLSIU will moderate the event.

The event is open to the public, with mandatory RSVP for non-NLS community guests. RSVP here.

LASSnet Book Discussion | ‘The Indian Constitution: A Conversation with Power’ by Dr. Gautam Bhatia

The Law and Social Sciences Research Network (LASSnet) is pleased to invite the NLS Community to an online book discussion on Dr. Gautam Bhatia’s new book ‘The Indian Constitution: A Conversation with Power‘.

The discussion will feature Prof. (Dr.) Amit Prakash, Centre for the Study of Law and Governance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, and Dr. Malavika Prasad, Advocate, Bengaluru in conversation with the author.

Day & Date: Thursday, July 31, 2025
Time: 5:30 to 7:00 PM (IST)
Zoom link: https://soas-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/91833034645

About the Talk

Gautam Bhatia will discuss his new book, ‘The Indian Constitution: A Conversation with Power.’ In 2024, the Indian Constitution turned seventy-five years old. Ever-enduring, ever-evolving, it has been a terrain of tumultuous debate and dissent in the nation’s courtrooms, upon its streets, and in the halls of Parliament. Continuing in this tradition, ‘The Indian Constitution: A Conversation with Power’ brings a new lens to analyse the Constitution as a document that creates, shapes, channels, and constrains power. Examining the history of Constitution-making, the debates in the Constituent Assembly, the Indian Constitution’s design and structure, and the judicial decisions that have shaped it, this book argues that the Constitution has been a battleground upon which different visions of power have contested for supremacy. For the most part, this contest has been marked by a centralising drift that is, a drift towards a concentration of power within the union executive. Elements of this are embedded within the Constitution’s design, but the drift has also been accelerated, at crucial historical moments, by Supreme Court judgments.

However, as this book makes clear, the centralizing drift is and was not inevitable. There have been moments of dissent and departure, which have illumined alternative possibilities. It is for the citizens of India to decide, ultimately, what vision(s) of constitutional power they want to adopt through their Constitution.

About the Author

Gautam Bhatia is a Delhi-based advocate and an Adjunct Professor at the Jindal Global Law School. He is the author of The Transformative Constitution (2019) and Unsealed Covers (2023). He has been involved in several contemporary constitutional cases, such as the challenge to the abrogation of Article 370, the electoral bonds case, the right to privacy case, and others. His work has been cited by the Supreme Court of India, and by various High Courts. He has served as amicus curae on two occasions before the Supreme Court of Kenya. He is also the author of three science-fiction novels, The Wall (2020), The Horizon (2021), and The Sentence (2024). (Source: HarperCollins Publishers India)

Roundtable on Copyright and Generative AI Training | By DPIIT IPR Chair, NLSIU & Columbia Law School

The DPIIT IPR Chair on Intellectual Property Rights at NLSIU, in collaboration with Columbia Law School’s Programme on Science, Technology & Intellectual Property Law, is organising a Roundtable on Copyright and Generative AI Training. The keynote address will be delivered by Hon’ble Justice Prathiba M. Singh, Delhi High Court.

Please note, the keynote address is open to the public. Participation in the Roundtable sessions is by invitation only.

Event Details

  • Venue: Allen & Overy Hall, Training Centre, NLSIU
  • Day & Date: Friday, August 1, 2025
  • Timings: Keynote talk: 10 – 11 AM | Roundtable: 11 AM – 5 PM

About the Roundtable

This full-day roundtable will bring together leading scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and technologists to engage in critical discussions around the copyright implications of using creative works to train generative AI models. The discussions will be under the Chatham House Rules and the event will be co-moderated by Professor Shyam Balganesh, Sol Goldman Professor of Law, Columbia Law School and Professor (Dr.) Arul George Scaria, Professor of Law, NLSIU.

Schedule

  • Welcome remarks (10:00-10:10): Prof. (Dr.) Sudhir Krishnaswamy, Vice-Chancellor, NLSIU
  • Keynote address (10:10-10:40): Hon’ble Justice Prathiba M. Singh, Judge, Delhi High Court
  • 10:45-11:00: Tea/Coffee Break
  • Session 1 (11:00-12:30):  Understanding the Indian Landscape
  • Lunch break: 12:30-13:30
  • Session 2 (13:30-14:30): Understanding the U.S. Landscape
  • 14:30-15:00: Tea/Coffee Break
  • Session 3 (15:00-16:00): Locating Copyright within Wider AI Regulation
  • Concluding remarks (16:00-16:30): Prof. Shyamkrishna Balganesh & Prof. (Dr.) Arul George Scaria

‘Reading Between the Lines’ with Dr. Sahar Romani

NLSIU’s poetry collective Firdaus-e-Alfaaz, in collaboration with the Academic Support Centre, are organising a session on ‘Reading Between the Lines’ with Dr. Sahar Romani. The event will take place on Tuesday, July 15, 2025, in the Library Basement between 4 pm and 5:30 pm. Join in to read, discuss, and reflect on contemporary poetry.

About the speaker

Dr. Sahar Romani is a poet and Clinical Assistant Professor at NYU’s Expository Writing Program. Her work has appeared in The Believer, Guernica, The Yale Review, and Poem-a-Day, among others. This event is a space for students and faculty to engage with contemporary poetry through reading, discussion, and reflection.

PACT Public Exhibition | SOAS Gallery | July 17- Sept 20, 2025

The School of Oriental and African Studies at University of London is hosting the PACT Public Exhibition from July 17 to September 20, 2025.

About the Exhibition

As 2025 marks the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of India, this exhibition brings together an interactive display of the ‘Pluralist Agreement and Constitutional Transformation’ (PACT) project, with short films, photographs, and other creative outputs produced through our collaborative research process alongside rare original archival documents, copies of petitions, letters and other correspondence from members of the public and civil society organisations, and contemporary expressions of the ownership and remaking of the Constitution in India today.

About PACT

PACT is funded by the UKRI Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC). PACT is led by SOAS University of London, and in collaboration with researchers at the University of Oxford, University of York, National Law School of India University and the Centre for Law and Policy Research (CLPR), India.

Source: pactproject.net

 

Session on Building your Rhodes Scholarship Application with Vibha Swaminathan

The Career Services Office is organising a session on ‘Building your Rhodes Scholarship Application’ on Wednesday, July 2, 2025. Ms. Vibha Swaminathan, a 2025 Rhodes Scholar-elect from NLSIU, will deliver the session between 3 and 4 pm in room 104 at the OAB. The session is open to NLS students across all programmes and years.

About the speaker

Vibha Swaminathan graduated from the LL.B. (Hons) programme at NLSIU in 2025, and will read for the BCL on the Rhodes Scholarship. At Oxford University, she is interested in examining the political and legal fragilities of citizenship, generated along intersectional axes of class, gender and religion.

Read our interview with Vibha.