Manu Kaushik: Before India Breaks Its Promises / Dushyant Dave: SC Should Have Declared New Farm Laws Unconstitutional / Republic Day Tractor Rally: Tear Gas At Singhu Border
Even the states are saying these laws are against the federal spirit. Legal eagles feel the laws do not follow the spirit of separation of powers, and are a case of executive overreach—since the executive plays the role of ‘enforcer to adjudicator and interpreter of the law’. Too much democracy? Neither farmers nor state governments nor the legal fraternity agrees.
Republic Day Tractor Rally: Tear Gas, Lathicharge As Farmers Break Barricades
Laws passed without constitutional authority, against the spirit of the Constitution (both in the context of federalism and separation of powers between branches), without any demand for it from the primary stakeholders, without consultation, without even a debate, when they threaten to usurp the farmer’s land, when it threatens the very existence of farmers when fundamentally the law is anti-farmer in every sense, how does one accept anything less than a repeal?...
Dushyant Dave: SC Should Have Declared New Farm Laws Unconstitutional
The government should work out a situation because the laws are definitely unconstitutional and they are passed in an extremely questionable manner. The laws have a harsh impact on the farmers, their lives and livelihoods. The farmers have a viewpoint which the government should have appreciated because the government has also brought the law in an extremely hurried manner. In a pandemic situation, they passed the bills in a hushed manner in Parliament. There were only two days of discussion in Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. That is not the way to pass the laws on such important issues. Here, you are changing the very structure of agriculture in the country…
Discussion
on Indian Agriculture and the ongoing Kisan agitation
Navsharan
Singh: A million reasons to march
Jairus
Banaji on the Indian corporate strategy of subordinating farm households and
family labor
STATE OF
RURAL AND AGRARIAN INDIA REPORT 2020. By the Network of Rural and Agrarian
Studies
Jairus Banaji on the Indian corporatist strategy of
subordinating farm households and family labor
Navsharan Singh: A million reasons to march
Discussion on Indian Agriculture and the ongoing Kisan
agitation
Amit Bhaduri: Faces in mirror held up by farmers’
protest
Can Capitalism and Democracy Coexist?
Amandeep Sandhu on Arthiyas - extract from PANJAB:
Journeys Through Fault Lines
Ravinder Kaur:
Has Modi finally met his match in India's farmers?
Indian Farmers' Protest - Work in progress videos
STATE OF RURAL AND AGRARIAN INDIA REPORT 2020. By the
Network of Rural and Agrarian Studies