Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Changing Paradigm of the Labour Laws in India: A legal Analysis
View through CrossRef
With the evolving landscape of labour laws in India, examining the recent shifts and their implications through a legal lens becomes necessary to study the changes brought by the new legislation. The new labour reforms aim at creating more job opportunities, providing safety and bringing transparency. There are about 200 state legislations and 40 central legislations, which frequently provide colluding jurisdictions, prompting revisions to integrate all of those laws under the umbrella of four labour codes. These codes provide several new clauses addressing the problems of laid-off workers and Unorganized workers.[1] India, with its complex socio-economic fabric and diverse workforce, has undergone significant transformations in its approach to regulating labour relations. The interstate workers have also been provided with the provisions of the Public Distribution System. This work elucidates approaches of the legislature to create a legal framework for dealing with these unique circumstances of labour. It explores whether the standards of international labour law could account for such an arrangement and provides that this is true, and to what degree. The author attempts to analyze the increased awareness and utilization of new labour codes in line with the existing labour legislations for improved assessment of existing labour law principles.
[1] Code on Social Security, 2020, ss. 154, 155, 156.
Title: Changing Paradigm of the Labour Laws in India: A legal Analysis
Description:
With the evolving landscape of labour laws in India, examining the recent shifts and their implications through a legal lens becomes necessary to study the changes brought by the new legislation.
The new labour reforms aim at creating more job opportunities, providing safety and bringing transparency.
There are about 200 state legislations and 40 central legislations, which frequently provide colluding jurisdictions, prompting revisions to integrate all of those laws under the umbrella of four labour codes.
These codes provide several new clauses addressing the problems of laid-off workers and Unorganized workers.
[1] India, with its complex socio-economic fabric and diverse workforce, has undergone significant transformations in its approach to regulating labour relations.
The interstate workers have also been provided with the provisions of the Public Distribution System.
This work elucidates approaches of the legislature to create a legal framework for dealing with these unique circumstances of labour.
It explores whether the standards of international labour law could account for such an arrangement and provides that this is true, and to what degree.
The author attempts to analyze the increased awareness and utilization of new labour codes in line with the existing labour legislations for improved assessment of existing labour law principles.
[1] Code on Social Security, 2020, ss.
154, 155, 156.
Related Results
ISSUES OF PROVIDING GUARANTEES AND SOCIAL PROTECTION FOR EAEU LABOUR MIGRANTS
ISSUES OF PROVIDING GUARANTEES AND SOCIAL PROTECTION FOR EAEU LABOUR MIGRANTS
Background: Today, the Eurasian Economic Union (hereinafter the EAEU) has formed its own
labour market; however, in the current international environment, issues related to ensurin...
Changing Scenario of Indian Labour and New Labour Codes: A Critical Analysis
Changing Scenario of Indian Labour and New Labour Codes: A Critical Analysis
The penetrating debate on Indian labour laws obstructing the flexibility of the labour market has taken centre stage in the last two decades, post the period of liberalisation of t...
THE ANALOGY OF STATUTE AND THE ANALOGY OF LAW AS DOCTRINAL INSTRUMENTS FOR LEGAL RESPONSE TO ECONOMIC CHALLENGES
THE ANALOGY OF STATUTE AND THE ANALOGY OF LAW AS DOCTRINAL INSTRUMENTS FOR LEGAL RESPONSE TO ECONOMIC CHALLENGES
Ukraine's contemporary legal system is undergoing a period of significant transformation, which necessitates not only a robust and stable legal framework, but also a flexible doctr...
Why Do Indians Experience Less Happiness Than Pakistanis?
Why Do Indians Experience Less Happiness Than Pakistanis?
This study explores the enigma of happiness inequality between India and Pakistan, despite India’s economic prowess. Employing inequality regression models, the study pinpoints cru...
Populisme Mahkamah Konstitusi dalam Penafsiran Perkara-Perkara pada Wilayah Open Legal Policy
Populisme Mahkamah Konstitusi dalam Penafsiran Perkara-Perkara pada Wilayah Open Legal Policy
In the past seven years, the striking characteristic of cases filed before the Constitutional Court (MK) has developed into cases at the open legal policy level. In open legal case...
Ten Years of the Global Labour Journal: Reflecting on the Rise of the New Global Labour Studies
Ten Years of the Global Labour Journal: Reflecting on the Rise of the New Global Labour Studies
The article examines the origins of the Global Labour Journal (GLJ) and its goal of broadening labour studies. It shows how, over the past decade, the GLJ has recorded and analysed...
De politieke economie van arbeidsmigratie in Nederland
De politieke economie van arbeidsmigratie in Nederland
The political economy of labour migration in the Netherlands
As a result of EU expansion since 2004, the number of labour migrants in the Netherlands has increased substa...
Labour Reforms and Social Welfare: The Developmental Debate
Labour Reforms and Social Welfare: The Developmental Debate
The much debated labour market reforms maintains the centre stage in the policy debate in India, caught in the vortex of the ‘Make in India’ campaign. The question posed by the aut...


