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Insights
Clear writing on law, legal education, courts, citizenship, and the future of the profession.
This is where the publishing programme thinks aloud in public. It brings together essays, explainers, reading guides, exam strategy notes, and reflections on the changing relationship between law, society, and technology. The aim is the same as in the books: to make law more readable, more rigorous, and more useful to the people who live with it.
What we write about
The writing is meant for students, young lawyers, teachers, and curious citizens who want more than superficial summaries. Some articles help readers prepare for exams or improve their reading of Bare Acts and judgments. Others step back and ask larger questions about legal education, courtroom culture, citizenship, and the impact of artificial intelligence on the profession.
Featured articles
AI In The CourtRoom: What Indian Lawyers Need To Prepare For
Artificial intelligence is already shaping how evidence is collected, contracts are drafted, and disputes are resolved. The article explores what the legal system must address before AI becomes routine without being properly understood — and what every practicing lawyer needs to know right now.
How to Prepare for the Translation Paper in Civil Judges Exam
The Civil Judges examination rewards depth, clarity, and disciplined legal understanding. The article identifies the areas aspirants cannot afford to under-prepare and offers a more structured approach to reading, revision, and answer-building.
How to Read Judgments Like a Working Lawyer
Most students read judgments as long stories. Practising lawyers read them as structured arguments with issues, facts, holdings, ratios, and unresolved tensions. A practical framework for moving from passive reading to active engagement.
More from the Insights archive
Five Habits That Separate Good Law Students from the Rest
The gap between students who read law well and those who struggle is almost never about intelligence — it is about method, consistency, and how they treat primary sources.
What Non-Obstante Clauses Actually Do — and Why Students Get Them Wrong
Not with standing anything contained in… The phrase appears in dozens of statutes. Most students underline it and move on. This article explains what it actually means and how to read it correctly.
Your Rights During a Police Interaction: What the Law Actually Says
Most citizens either panic or argue when stopped by police. Both responses are avoidable. The article sets out what the law permits, what it prohibits, and what every citizen should know before it matters.
Why Law Schools Produce Graduates Who Cannot Read a Bare Act
Coverage without comprehension is the central problem of legal education in India today. This article names it plainly and asks what both students and institutions can do differently.
Why this section exists
A website should not be a brochure alone. It should also be a place where readers can return for thought, clarity, and conversation. The Insights section exists because books take time to write, but ideas often need to be shared sooner — while a question is still alive in the classroom, in the profession, or in public life.
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