Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961
Name: Apoorva Sinha
College: Amity University Chhattisgarh
Dowry Prohibition Act, Indian law, enacted on May 1, 1961, intended
to prevent the giving or receiving of a dowry. Under the Dowry
Prohibition Act, dowry includes property, goods, or money given by
either party to the marriage, by the parents of either party, or by
anyone else in connection with the marriage. The Dowry Prohibition
Act applies to persons of all religions in India. The original text of the
Dowry Prohibition Act was widely judged to be ineffective in curbing
the practice of dowry. Moreover, specific forms of violence against
women continued to be linked to a failure to meet dowry demands. As
a result, the legislation underwent subsequent amendment. In 1984,
for example, it was changed to specify that presents given to a bride
or a groom at the time of a wedding are allowed. The law required,
however, that a list be maintained describing each gift, its value, the
identity of the person giving it, and the person’s relation to either
party to the marriage. The act and relevant sections of the Indian
Penal Code were further amended to protect female victims of dowry-
related violence. Another layer of legal protection was provided in
2005 under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act.
Amendments to the original Dowry Prohibition Act also established
minimum and maximum punishments for giving and receiving dowry
and created a penalty for demanding dowry or advertising offers of
money or property in connection with a marriage. The Indian Penal
Code was also modified in 1983 to establish specific crimes of dowry-
related cruelty, dowry death, and abetment of suicide. These
enactments punished violence against women by their husbands or
their relatives when proof of dowry demands or dowry harassment
could be shown.
Frequently there is no workable solution for female victims of
domestic violence. For some victims the unrelenting cycle of violence
produces diminished self-esteem, helplessness, depression, and
exaggerated feelings of imprisonment, even the belief that they
deserve abuse. More material obstacles stand in the way of most
victims. Many are financially dependent on their abusers, and, since
many abuse victims are mothers, they particularly fear being unable to
support their children if they leave a violent partner. Many fear
reporting the crime because the police can offer no reliable protection
against retaliation. One of the worst problems is that typical abusers
often become most violent and vengeful precisely when women try to
leave; numbers of women have been murdered by male partners when
they tried to press charges or win orders of protection.
In the early 1800s most legal systems implicitly accepted wife-beating
as a husband’s right, part of his entitlement to control over the
resources and services of his wife. Feminist agitation in the 1800s
produced a sea change in public opinion, and by the end of the 19th
century most courts denied that husbands had any right to “chastise”
their wives. But few women had realistic sources of help, and most
police forces did nothing to protect women. The 1967 training manual
for the International Association of Chiefs of Police stated that arrests
in instances of domestic violence were to be made only as a “last
resort.”
Environmental Law
Name: Apoorva Sinha
College: Amity University Chhattisgarh
Evironmental law, principles, policies, directives, and regulations
enacted and enforced by local, national, or international entities to
regulate human treatment of the nonhuman world. The vast field
covers a broad range of topics in diverse legal settings, such as state
bottle-return laws in the United States, regulatory standards for
emissions from coal-fired power plants in Germany, initiatives in
China to create a “Green Great Wall”—a shelter belt of trees—to
protect Beijing from sandstorms, and international treaties for the
protection of biological diversity and the ozonosphere. During the late
20th century environmental law developed from a modest adjunct of
the law of public health regulations into an almost universally
recognized independent field protecting both human health and
nonhuman nature.
Throughout history national governments have passed occasional
laws to protect human health from environmental contamination.
About AD 80 the Senate of Rome passed legislation to protect the
city’s supply of clean water for drinking and bathing. In the 14th
century England prohibited both the burning of coal in London and
the disposal of waste into waterways. In 1681 the Quaker leader of the
English colony of Pennsylvania, William Penn, ordered that one acre
of forest be preserved for every five acres cleared for settlement, and
in the following century Benjamin Franklin led various campaigns to
curtail the dumping of waste. In the 19th century, in the midst of
the Industrial Revolution, the British government passed regulations
to reduce the deleterious effects of coal burning and chemical
manufacture on public health and the environment.
Prior to the 20th century there were few international environmental
agreements. The accords that were reached focused primarily on
boundary waters, navigation, and fishing rights along shared
waterways and ignored pollution and other ecological issues. In the
early 20th century, conventions to protect commercially valuable
species were reached, including the Convention for the Protection of
Birds Useful to Agriculture (1902), signed by 12 European
governments; the Convention for the Preservation and Protection of
Fur Seals (1911), concluded by the United States, Japan, Russia, and
the United Kingdom; and the Convention for the Protection of
Migratory Birds (1916), adopted by the United States and the United
Kingdom (on behalf of Canada) and later extended to Mexico in
1936. In the 1930s Belgium, Egypt, Italy, Portugal, South Africa,
Sudan, and the United Kingdom adopted the Convention Relative to
the Preservation of Fauna and Flora in their Natural State, which
committed those countries to preserve natural fauna and flora in
Africa by means of national parks and reserves. Spain and France
signed the convention but never ratified it, and Tanzania formally
adopted it in 1962. India, which acceded to the agreement in 1939,
was subject to the sections of the document prohibiting “trophies”
made from any animal mentioned in the annex.
Much environmental law also is embodied in the decisions of
international, national, and local courts. Some of it is manifested in
arbitrated decisions, such as the Trail Smelter arbitration (1941),
which enjoined the operation of a smelter located in British Columbia,
Canada, near the international border with the U.S. state of
Washington and held that “no State has the right to use or permit the
use of its territory in such a manner as to cause injury by fumes in or
to the territory of another or the properties or persons therein.” Some
environmental law also appears in the decisions of national courts.
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