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Strategic Implementation Of International Law In India’s Foreign Policy And Legal System

Strategic Implementation Of International Law In India’s Foreign Policy And Legal System: A Manoeuvre




Shivani Pandey, University of Petroleum and Energy Studies

ABSTRACT

The state practice of India in contemporary world Scenario and International law is one of the agreeable means to assess and comprehend India's current and genuine strategy and hands-on position on different issues which straightforwardly or in a roundabout way influence its clout as a developing worldwide and local power. Nations like the United States of America (USA), the United Kingdom (UK), Germany, Australia, Japan and the Netherlands give, consistently, refreshes on perspectives and practices of their legislatures in open international law, through true archives as well as by compositions of driving researchers of international law.

These are law of the sea, refugee law, basic freedoms, International Environment Law, Climate change, demobilization, international institutional law (UN changes and G-20) and peaceful settlement of international debates.

This work looks to improve the current information base of the Indian state practice in international law. It shows how India has been adding to the making of international law in accordance with its rising status as a worldwide and local power.

The review means to empower how a nation like India will answer significant improvements in international law. Other than this it carries out responses of different states to the Indian state practice. The review empowers us to comprehend how the legal executive and common society foundations have acknowledged or dismissed the Indian practice.

The study further assists us with assessing the instruments of optional sources and hard proof of state practice to lay out the presence of international commitments. This research work gives a hypothetical examination of state practice as an essential component of standard international law, looks at India's quest for making of an international law, India's perspectives on major meanings of International law and arrangements of the Constitution of India which Indian state practice at the International level.

Keywords: Law of the sea, Refugee law, Basic freedoms, International Environment Law, Climate change, Demobilization, International Institutional law, Legal executive.

Indian Journal of Law and Legal Research

Abbreviation: IJLLR

ISSN: 2582-8878

Website: www.ijllr.com

Accessibility: Open Access

License: Creative Commons 4.0

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Licensing:

​All research articles published in The Indian Journal of Law and Legal Research are fully open access. i.e. immediately freely available to read, download and share. Articles are published under the terms of a Creative Commons license which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Disclaimer:

The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of the IJLLR or its members. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of material therein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the IJLLR.

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