- Opinion
- 19 Aug 2024
- 1 min read
Why Indian laws have Latin and is it really needed?
This opinion was published in Times of India on August 19, 2024.
About the Authors
Arghya is the Founder and Research Director at Vidhi. His areas of specialisation are constitutional law and regulation of the digital economy. He has served on a number of government committees including the B.N. Srikrishna-led committee of experts on a data protection framework for India. Arghya has a number of academic publications on the Supreme Court and the Constitution in leading law journals such as Law Quarterly Review and Public Law. He is also a columnist at The Telegraph and The Times of India. He has most recently authored a book “Independence and Accountability of the Indian Higher Judiciary” (Cambridge, 2019) which builds on his doctoral work at Oxford University. Prior to founding Vidhi, he was at Oxford as a Lecturer in Administrative Law at Pembroke College.
Shireen currently works as a Research Fellow, Founder's Office. Shireen holds a Master's degree in Sociology from Delhi School of Economics, and a BA(H) Sociology from University of Delhi. Prior to joining Vidhi, she worked with the Office of Dr. Virander Singh Chauhan, where she led research, communications, and advocacy on public health issues, particularly mental health & suicide prevention, glaucoma, and tuberculosis. She has an extensive experience working on areas of gender rights, public health, environment, and looking at how intersectional identities impact social issues.
Aditya is currently a Senior Resident Fellow in the Research Director's Office at the Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy. He graduated from the NLSIU Bangalore in 2021 with a BA LLB (Hons). His areas of interest include constitutional law, civil procedure, and dispute resolution. He has academic publications on constitutional law, legislative drafting, and arbitration law in journals such as Statute Law Review and Arbitration International. At Vidhi, he has been providing legislative drafting assistance to various Ministries, Departments, and Authorities of the Central Government and various State Governments.