Tuesday, 16 December 2025

LLM Notes: Comprehensive LLM Revision Guide on Public Utility Laws

PAGE 1: FOUNDATIONAL FRAMEWORK & CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS

I. Definition & Nature of Public Utilities

Key Concept: Services essential to community life provided by government or statutory bodies

Characteristics: - Natural monopoly (high fixed costs, infrastructure-intensive) - Economies of scale - Universal service obligation - Cross-subsidization mechanism - Non-excludability principle

Examples: Railways, electricity, water, telecommunications, postal services, aviation

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Comprehensive LLM Revision Guide on Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile Justice System in India

 This one-page checklist consolidates the key themes, sections, and case laws from your notes for rapid revision before the exam.

I. CORE CONCEPTS & DEFINITIONS (The "Who")

·       Child (JJ Act 2015): Person who has not completed 18 years of age.

·       The Big Distinction:

o   CCL (Child in Conflict with Law): Alleged to have committed an offence. Authority: Juvenile Justice Board (JJB).

o   CNCP (Child in Need of Care & Protection): Victim, abandoned, or neglected. Authority: Child Welfare Committee (CWC).

·       Offence Categories (for CCL):

o   Petty: Max punishment < 3 years.

o   Serious: Punishment 3–7 years.
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Monday, 15 December 2025

LLM Notes: Key findings of Supreme Court in the case of Dr Ashwani Kumar v. Union of India (2019)

 Key findings in Dr Ashwani Kumar v. Union of India (2019) can be reduced to a few clear exam‑oriented points:

1. Torture = Article 21 Violation, Crime Against Humanity

  • The Court reaffirmed that torture in any form is inhuman, degrading, offends human dignity and constitutes an inroad into the right to life under Article 21; no law or procedure can authorise such treatment.

  • Custodial torture was described as a “crime against humanity” directly infringing Article 21, attracting constitutional scrutiny and remedies.

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LLM Notes: Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), 1979


1. Introduction & Nature

·       Adoption: Adopted by the UN General Assembly on 18 December 1979 and entered into force in 1981.

·       Status: Often described as the "International Bill of Rights for Women," it is the principal international human rights treaty exclusively dedicated to gender equality.

·       Scope: It comprises a Preamble and 30 Articles structured into six parts, defining discrimination and setting an agenda for national action.

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