• Latest
  • Trending
DY-Chandrachud

Teaching law in regional languages

July 20, 2024
heart attack

Study shows kidney drug can boost treatment for heart attack patients

September 2, 2024
Swaminathan

RBI’s stringent actions intended to protect customers: Swaminathan

September 2, 2024
Dhanush, Shourya and Vania

Dhanush, Shourya and Vania trio break world record in Air Rifle at Deaf World Championships

September 2, 2024
Indian equity indices opened flat on August 29 due to negative cues from Asian and US markets

Sensex closes above 82,500 points for first time ever

September 2, 2024
coal

India’s coal production sees 6.48 pc growth at 384 MT in April-August

September 2, 2024
railways

Cabinet nod to Rs 18,036 cr project to connect Mumbai, Indore via shortest rail route

September 2, 2024
telecom manufacturing

Aim to democratise telecom services under Digital Bharat Nidhi initiative

September 2, 2024
ace ev

Indian commercial vehicle industry reverses decline, to see modest growth in FY25

September 2, 2024
India’s manufacturing growth

India’s manufacturing growth eases in August, stays above long-run average

September 2, 2024
Supreme Court

SC dismisses PIL seeking caste-based census

September 2, 2024

Indian Navy’s P-8I lands in France, marking its first ever deployment in Europe

September 2, 2024
PM Modi congratulates Nishad Kumar

PM Modi congratulates Nishad Kumar on winning silver medal in Paralympics

September 2, 2024
Blitz India UK Edition
Contact
Download
  • Home
  • Booming Britain
  • G20 Podium
  • Legal
  • Specials
  • National
    • East
    • West
    • South
    • North
  • News
  • Education
  • Videos
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Welcome To Blitz India Media
No Result
View All Result

Teaching law in regional languages

It can improve legal system's access: CJI

by Blitzindiamedia
July 20, 2024
in Legal
0
DY-Chandrachud
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Blitz Bureau

Batting for the need to teach law courses in regional languages and in simpler parlance, Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud said it was imperative to use regional languages in legal proceedings to make the case understandable for litigants.

Addressing the third convocation of Ram Manohar Lohia National Law University, Lucknow, he said that the inability to explain the principles of law to the general public in simple terms was a shortcoming of the legal profession and legal education.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Sustainable development

A constant force of good

“If the fundamental and basic principles of law are not explained in simpler manner to general public then there is definitely some flaw in the legal profession and legal education,” he added.

“When I came to Allahabad (Prayagraj) after spending my professional life as a judge of the Bombay High Court, it was culturally different for me. The proceedings in the Bombay High Court were conducted in English, though the record, especially, in criminal cases, was maintained in Marathi. In Allahabad High Court I found lawyers starting their arguments in Hindi quite efficiently. It made me realise the potential of lawyers to present their case efficiently even in their local language… I did not mean that we should not include English in the curriculum of legal education, but to include local languages too along with English,” he said.

Discussing the handicaps of court proceedings taking place in English language, the CJI said judges and lawyers were well-versed in English, but the common man is not. “English can’t translate the affection of a mother for her child. At the other end of the spectrum, English can’t express the crime committed in a fit of rage between two farmers who are neighbours,” he maintained.

‘If the fundamental and basic principles of law are not explained in simpler manner to general public then there is definitely some flaw in the legal profession and legal education’

The CJI further said, “Laws related to regional issues should also be taught in our universities. Suppose a person comes from a village to the university or to the university’s legal aid centre and shares his land-related problem. If the student does not know the meaning of Khasra (land record) and Khatauni (land record document), how will the student be able to help that person?”

“After coming to Uttar Pradesh, I realised how precious land is to the people. I understood the meaning and importance of ‘taal’ and ‘talaiyaa’ (pond) in legal language,” he added. Exhorting the RMLNLU to consider an LLB course in Hindi, the CJI felt that laws related to regional issues should also be taught under law courses in universities.

Blitzindiamedia News Subscription

Search

No Result
View All Result
Welcome To Blitz India Media

© 2023 Blitz India Media -Blitz India Building A New Nation

Navigate Site

  • Booming Britain
  • G20 Podium
  • New India
  • Legal
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • The Blitz
  • G20 Podium
  • National
    • East
    • West
    • South
    • North
  • Focus
  • Opinion
  • Booming Britain
  • Perspective
  • Legal
  • Specials
  • Download

© 2023 Blitz India Media -Blitz India Building A New Nation