Call for Papers: TISS Seminar on Access to Criminal & Correctional Justice for Marginalised [Jan 14, Mumbai] : Submit by Dec 20
The Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) was established in 1936, as the Sir Dorabji Tata Graduate School of Social Work to meet the emerging need for trained human service professionals accorded the status of deemed university in 1964, and funded by the University Grants Commission (UGC). Since then TISS is a postgraduate Institute of national stature today.
In pursuance of the TISS mission towards creating a people-centered society that promotes equality, social change and transformation and human rights for all, especially the marginalized and vulnerable groups, the School of Law, Rights and Constitutional Governance at TISS conducts a One Year Full time, LL.M Course in Access to Justice.
The School was set up at the Mumbai Campus in June 2012 with the main objective to advance socially relevant legal education and promote human rights education and lawyering.
One of the mandates of the school is to sensitize lawyers to work towards protecting and promoting justice for disadvantage communities in line with the tenets of Indian Constitution, thereby to work towards law reform.
India is a social, democratic, republic governed by rule of law. The Constitution of India guarantees all citizen basic fundamental rights including equal treatment and protection of law and access to legal including civil, criminal mechanisms and institutions. If law is equal for all, accordingly access to justice should be similarly available to all.
If equal justice under law is to be a reality, there has to be equal access to courts, institutions and legal mechanisms. Further, these Constitutional guarantees are coupled with state obligation under Directive Principles of State Policy to ensure justice in all spheres of life equitably among the citizenry.
Despite these robust constitutional protections, large sections of society particularly the marginalised groups owing to their disadvantageous socio-economic condition face onerous burden to access legal protection, judicial institutions. In addition to this, these communities receive least or minimal co-cooperation from law enforcement agencies to avail legal support.
It is usually observed that the marginalised communities are at the forefront of receiving oppressive treatment at the behest of legal institutions and remain largely vulnerable being inducted in prison, police custody with or without compliance with their legal safeguards. Keeping in line the present scenario, the courts being overburdened and law enforcement agencies acting arbitrarily, this further creates bar to access to justice for the same.
Today there is an access-to-justice “crisis” imperilling the country’s legal system as access to courts is expensive, time-consuming, procedure-ridden, technical, difficult to comprehend which impedes poor and vulnerable people from approaching the same.
In the light of the above-mentioned, this seminar has the objective to delve, deliberate and to generate awareness amongst students of varied disciplines, legal luminaries and the diaspora working on Access to Justice on two cardinal issues mainly access to justice through criminal and correctional legal mechanisms, its impact and implications on the marginalised community in terms of entitlement, legal empowerment and issues connected there with and possible resolve.
The School of Law, Rights and Constitutional Governance calls upon students, research scholars, legal professionals, academicians, civil society organisations, social activists and the representatives of governmental to actively participate and present their perspectives on the same.
For the purpose of this seminar the themes and sub-theme are listed below are indicative of relevant research areas to give the prospective authors innovative prepositions about the ambit of discussion during the course of seminar.
However, the authors may draw upon issues not limited to but touching upon the same for abstract submission and paper presentation.
I. Law enforcement agencies – Police and Investigating Agencies: A gateway to Access to Justice
II. Access to Justice for Victims & Witnesses
III. Rights of Prison Inmates
IV. Role of Judicial Institutions: Courts, Tribunals in Access to Justice
The seminar invites abstract and full paper submissions on the given research areas in the prescribed format reiterated below:
The abstract should be accompanied by a cover page comprising of a brief profile of the author including name, current academic qualification, designation, institution/organization, e-mail address, contact number and postal address for correspondence.
Abstracts & research papers may be submitted to the Convener of the seminar at seminar.atj@tiss.edu.
The Registration fee for the seminar is as follows:
The seminar is open to all for attending and participation, subject to payment of mandatory registration fee.
Note:
The accommodation for the participants are available in the specified categories:
Note:
For any clarification, kindly e-mail your queries at query.atj@tiss.edu
For further correspondence, you may call on these below:
Student Conveners
Email: m2017atj031@tiss.edu
Mob: +919540378500
2. Vartika Anand
Mob: +919506999469
Email: m2017atj025@tiss.edu
3. Aniket Khadse
Mob: +919665412262
Faculty Coordinator & Co-Coordinator
Mob: +917829826306
Email: sonali.kusum@tiss.edu
Mob: +918369821547
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