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  • Rule of Law v/s Rule by Law

    This article focuses on bringing clarity to the two very different concepts which look similar at face value.  Sir Ivor Jennings, the famous constitutional historian, characterized the Rule of Law as ‘an unruly horse’.

    First, let’s be clear about what the Rule of Law is not.

    Rule of Law should not be equated with law and order. The breakdown of law and order is a temporary phenomenon.

    Breakdown of the Rule of Law means the collapse of good governance and the breakdown of constitutional machinery in a State.

    Now, let’s see what the Rule of Law is.

    It may be difficult to define the concept with precision but in essence, it signifies a commitment to certain principles and values. Generally, the rule of law is the principle that no one is above the law and treated equally among citizens.

    The Rule of Law symbolizes the quest of civilized democratic societies to combine that degree of liberty without which law is tyranny with that degree of law without which liberty becomes license.

    However high you may be, the law is above you.

    For instance, One may be the Prime Minister or the Speaker or the Imam or the Archbishop or a judge or the Sankaracharya or whoever, all are equally subject to the law. That imparts the element of non-discrimination in the concept of the Rule of Law.

    What are the principles of the Rule of Law?

    It was A.V. Dicey, the English Professor and Constitutional expert, who developed this concept. He defined 3 principles that govern the rule of law.

    1. Supremacy of Law
      No man shall be punished or made to suffer in body or goods except for the violation of the law. Such a violation must be established in an ordinary court of the land and in an ordinary legal manner.
    2. Equality before Law
      No man is above the law and everyone, whatever his condition or rank is, is subject to the ordinary laws of the land. <It means a person can sue or be sued in a court of law>
    3. Predominance of Legal Spirit
      The result of the ordinary law of the land is Constitution. It indicates that the general principles of the constitution are the result of judicial decisions of the courts in England. <However, this principle does not apply in the case of a written constitution. It stands modified in India, where it reads that the constitution is the supreme law of the land & all other laws in order to be legally valid shall conform to the constitution>

    What is the importance of Rule of Law?

    Rule of Law is essential for the protection of human rights.

    This concept changed the mode of administration from “King was Law” to “Law is King”. It is quite essential for the healthy functioning of democracy.

    In its path-breaking judgment in Keshavanand Bharti’s case, our Supreme Court ruled that the Rule of Law is part of the Basic Structure of the Constitution.

    The Constitution in order to preserve the rule of law, has conferred the writ jurisdiction under Art. 32 and Art. 226 on Supreme Court and High Court respectively.

    How Rule of Law is different from Rule of Law?

    It is important not to confuse Rule of Law with rule by law.

    The existence of a law is necessary but that is not sufficient. The law must have a certain core component that guarantees the basic human rights and the human dignity of every person.

    Rule by law can become an instrument of oppression and it can give legitimacy to the enactment of laws that may grossly violate basic human rights.

    Let’s see with examples, how rule by law can be misused

    Nazi Germany put Jews in concentration camps and thereafter sent them to the gas chambers. The justification offered was that there was a law that empowered such acts to be done. But that was rule by law, not the Rule of Law.

    During the apartheid regime in South Africa, repressive and racially discriminatory laws against the black majority were sought to be justified on the basis of enacted laws.

    Let’s see the relevance of the Rule of Law in India

    In India, this concept is implicitly mentioned in the fundamental rights of our constitution. The equality before law (Article 14) includes Rule of Law in itself.

    Indian Constitution grants some exceptions to the Rule of Law.

    What are the exceptions to the Rule of Law in India?

    1. The President/Governor is not answerable to court of law in discharge of his executive functions.
    2. No criminal proceedings whatsoever can be instituted against the President or Governor of the state, while he is in office.
    3. No civil proceedings in which relief is claimed can be filed against President or Governor except after the expiration of a 2-month notice that is served on him.

    Under International laws, the visiting heads of state, heads of govt, ministers, officials, and foreign diplomats who are posted in the country are not subjected to the jurisdiction of local courts in the discharge of their official functions.

    What are the concerns regarding the Rule of Law in India?

    Legal experts have raised their concerns regarding the implementation of the Rule of Law in India. A free democratic society like India cannot have recourse to measures that violate the very essence of the rule of law.

    For instance, a law that permits the killing of suspected terrorists or enables indefinite detention without prior hearing at the absolute discretion of the executive is destructive of the rule of law. Fake encounters have no place in a govt professedly based on the rule of law.

    Therefore, we should strive to instill the rule of law temperament and culture at home and in educational institutions. The aim should be that rule of law becomes the secular religion of all nations based on tolerance and mutual respect.

  • Help needed… from sincere readers…

    I forget a lot of the information that I read in books and this truly discourages me to read any new information, is there any way to solve this issue?

  • Progress in Dedicated Freight Corridor: Ministry of Railway Updates 

    Freight operations on the Indian Railways are set to witness a paradigm shift with the stage-wise completion of its 2 dedicated freight corridors, the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor (WDFC) and the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor (EDFC), over the next 4 years, beginning 2017-18. Let’s have some updates from Ministry of Railway!

    What are the objectives of Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs)?

    • To create world-class rail infrastructure with advanced technology and knowledge to carry higher throughput per train.
    • To improve overall transport efficiency.
    • To offer customer guaranteed, faster transit, energy efficient, environment-friendly transport.
    • To encourage total supply chain management.
    • Increase Rail share in the freight market.

    What’s the mandate for DFCs?

    • Effective independence in decision-making and functions with a market focus and business orientation.
    • DFCs will provide non-discriminatory access to freight trains belonging to Indian Railways and other qualified operators.
    • A Complementing Indian Railways for increasing the Rail share.

    So, that’s why Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India Limited (DFCCIL) come into picture?

    • Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India (DFCCIL) is a Special Purpose Vehicle set up under the administrative control of Ministry of Railways.
    • To undertake planning & development, mobilization of financial resources and construction, maintenance and operation of the DFCs.
    • DFCCIL has been set up with 100% equity by Ministry of Railways and registered as a company under the Companies Act 1956 on 30th October, 2006.

    Did you know about Golden Quadrilateral ?

    • The genesis of the Dedicated Freight Corridor is due to saturation in rail transportation capacity of Indian Railways on the Golden Quadrilateral.
    • The Indian Railways’ network linking the 4 metropolitan cities of Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Howrah, along with its 2 diagonals (Delhi-Chennai and Mumbai-Howrah) commonly known as the Golden Quadrilateral.
    • Adding up to a total route length of 10,122 km, carries more than 58% of its revenue earning freight traffic.

    What are the reasons that led to demand for additional capacity for rail freight transportation?

    • Growing international trade along existing Eastern and Western Routes.
    • In the first phase, the Government of India has approved construction of two corridors-the Western DFC (1504 route km) and Eastern DFC (Estimated 1856 route km)- spanning a total length of about 3360 route km.
    • The Eastern Corridor, starting from Dankuni in West Bengal will pass through the states of Jharkhand, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Haryana to terminate at Ludhiana in Punjab.
    • The Western Corridor connecting Dadri in Uttar Pradesh to Mumbai – Jawaharlal Nehru Port (JNPT), will traverse through NCR and the states of Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat and Maharashtra.

    How will these corridors helps in Industrial Growth?

    Multi Modal Logistic Hubs

    • The DFC network would attract setting up of Multimodal Logistics Parks along the corridor to facilitate value addition including packaging, retailing, labeling, pelletizing, transportation etc.
    • The last mile connectivity in terms of door to door services will be provided to the customers by 3PL service providers.

    Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) & Amritsar-Delhi-Kolkata Industrial Corridor (ADKIC)

    • Impact of DFCCIL is visible as a driver of Industrial Growth with planning and development of DMIC & ADKIC along the DFC.
    • Industrial Corridors have been planned using the backbone of the DFC.
    •  Industrial Corridor will get benefits from the World-Class Rail Infrastructure of the DFC.
    • The traffic originating from the Industrialized Corridor will contribute significantly to traffic on the DFC.

    Let’s see progress of these 2 significant corridors –

    Western Corridor

    • Western Corridor comprising of estimated 1504 km of a double line track from Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust to Dadri via Vadodara-Sanand-Palanpur Phulera-Rewari.
    • The Corridor will provide a boost to EXIM Trade.

    Eastern Corridor

    • The Eastern Corridor with a route length of estimated 1856 km and consisting of the some distinct segments.
    • Traffic on EDFC comprises of coal for the power plants in the northern region of India from Coalfields located in state of Bihar, Jharkhand and Bengal , finished steel, food grains, cement, fertilizer, limestone from Rajasthan to steel plants in the east and general goods.

    How will DFC aim at reducing Carbon Footprints?

    • DFC aims at to follow a low carbon path adopting various technological options which can help DFC to operate in a more energy-efficient fashion.
    • As per detailed study on a Green House Gas (GHS) emission forecasting for a 30-year period Cumulative GHG emissions over the 30-year period in the case of no-DFC scenario would have been 582 million ton CO2 while in the DFC scenario it would be 124.5 million ton CO2.
    • This demonstrates that in absence of DFC implementation approximately 4.5 times more GHG would be emitted in 30-year period for freight transportation envisaged on the Eastern and Western Corridor.

    Are there any future corridors in the list?

    Ministry of Railways has assigned DFCCIL to undertake Preliminary Engineering & Traffic Survey (PETS) for 4 additional corridors, which is in progress.

    • East-West Corridor (Kolkata-Mumbai) Approx 2330 Kms.
    • North-South Corridor (Delhi-Chennai) Approx 2343 Kms.
    • East Coast Corridor (Kharagpur-Vijayawada) 1100 Kms.
    • Southern Corridor (Chennai-Goa) Approx 899 Kms.

    Source - PIB features
  • Question of Gender Justice in Religious institutions (Temples)

    Recent case of Sabarimala shrine in Kerala goes against gender justice (basic tenet of our fundamental rights).
    The question comes to the forefront of Supreme Court, whether women can be barred entry to the temples demands solutions that agree with constitutional guarantee of equality, nondiscrimination and freedom of religion!
    Let’s put our hands together to find solutions. Shall we?

  • Irrigation In India – PMKSY, AIBP, Watershed Management, Neeranchan, etc.

    Neeranchal National Watershed Project

    As a part GS-3 – Irrigation systems, We need to focus on relevant projects/schemes launched in 2015-16. We will try to bring all such important projects/schemes. One such project is, “Neeranchal” for the Watershed Component of the Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayi Yojana (PMKSY), Let’s see it in brief!

    What is a watershed?

    A watershed also known as drainage basin is an extent or an area of land where surface water from rain, melting snow or ice converges to a single point at a lower elevation, usually the exit of the basin, where the waters join another waterbody, such as a river, lake etc.


     


    What is watershed management?

    • Watershed management is an adaptive, comprehensive, integrated multi-resource management planning process that seeks to balance healthy ecological, economic, and cultural/social conditions within a watershed.
    • Watershed management serves to integrate planning for land and water; it takes into account both ground and surface water flow, recognizing and planning for the interaction of water, plants, animals and human land use found within the physical boundaries of a watershed.

    What are the objectives of Neeranchal?

    • The Neeranchal Project will support PMKSY to improve watershed management practices and demonstrate measurable results in selected sub-watersheds
    • It will introduce new hydrological approaches and innovative tools for community participation with a more integrated watershed planning process
    • Pilot new field practices that will improve conservation outcomes, water availability, agricultural yields and climate resilience, and scale up a more effective monitoring and evaluation system to track performance
    • The project will be implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development over a six-year period (2016-21)

    Let’s first learn about Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana (PMKSY)

    • PMKSY is a central scheme that aims at providing irrigation facilities to every village in the country by converging ongoing irrigation schemes
    • The vision of extending the coverage of irrigation ‘Har Khet Ko Paani’ and improving water use efficiency ‘More crop per drop’ in a focused manner
    • With end to end solution on source creation, distribution, management, field application and extension activities
    • A dynamic annual fund allocation methodology mandates states, to allot more funds to irrigation sectors for becoming eligible to access funds under this scheme, is being considered

    The Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana programme should concentrate on 2 important things –

    • First, it should quickly put to use 20–40 million ha of unutilised irrigation potential created in major, medium and minor irrigation projects
    • Second, it should provide better quality power rations to farmers during the time of peak irrigation demand.
    • Madhya Pradesh has done precisely this and multiplied the state’s irrigated area quickly, at small incremental cost, delivering double-digit agricultural growth

    What about funding ?

    • The Government of India and the World Bank have signed a US$ 178.50 million credit for the Neeranchal National Watershed Project to improve watershed management in rural rainfed areas
    • The credit will support the watershed activities of the PMKSY in selected states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha and Rajasthan
    • It will cover about 400 sub-watersheds of about 5,000 ha each and reach approximately 482,000 farmer households and two million people
    • The credit is from the International Development Association (IDA) – the World Bank’s concessionary lending arm with a maturity of 25 years, including a 5 year grace period

    [IDA – International financial institution which offers concessional loans and grants to the world’s poorest developing countries. The IDA is a member of the World Bank Group]

    Concerns that will be addressed by Neeranchal-

    • Bring about institutional changes in watershed and rainfed agricultural management practices in India
    • Build systems that ensure watershed programmes and rainfed irrigation management practices are better focused, and more coordinated, and have quantifiable results
    • Devise strategies for the sustainability of improved watershed. management practices in programme areas, even after the withdrawal of project support
    • Through the watershed plus approach, support improved equity, livelihoods, and incomes through forward linkages, on a platform of inclusiveness and local participation


     

     What are the benefits?

    • Lead to reducing surface runoff of rainwater
    • It will increase recharge of groundwater and better availability of water in rainfed areas
    • It resulting in incremental rainfed agriculture productivity, enhanced milk yield and increased cropping intensity through better convergence related programmes in project areas
    • It will strengthen and provide technical assistance to enhance delivery capacity
    • This is an area development programme and all people living in the project area will be benefitted

    What are the challenges ahead?

    • Enhanced participation of communities, building stronger capacities and systems to plan, implement, monitor and post-project sustainability of local institutions and assets
    • These challenges, if not resolved, can result in implementation delays, slow disbursements and benefits

    Want to read more?

    Published with inputs from Arun
  • My fb feed is full of Roman Saini

    Has he completely resigned or taken a sabbatical like in corporate jobs or universities?

    Is it not allowed to teach while in service? Or be a part of NGO while in service… His unacademy is FREE nah? Why cant he do both when he has a team now?

    Anyone knows more or cares to speculate?

  • Hobby = books? Who is reading what (non-text book)

    Lakshmikanth gets boring… and i am just starting out with polity for 2016… any book lovers of the fiction category here?

  • Optionals going out this year?

    Many of us are asking whether to choose this subject or the other but are optionals going out this year? Last year they released the notifications just in the nick of time and CSAT was made passing only…

    Except for pure humanities optionals, I don’t think others would be having much problem…. I have philosophy

  • Is Jalikattu similar to the western bull fighting sport?

    I am trying to understand similarities here… when we say that it is cruel etc. are the references and images drawn from the west?

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