West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences

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The WB National University of Juridical Sciences

Motto Yuktiheena Vicharetu Dharmahnih Prajayate
Judgement Devoid Of Logic Destroys Dharma
Established 1999
Type Law School (National University)
Vice-Chancellor Dr. (Prof.) Mahendra P Singh
Undergraduates 600
Postgraduates 80
Location Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Campus Urban, 5 Acres
Website http://www.nujs.edu

Coordinates: 22° 33'N 88° 24'E The West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences, often abbreviated to NUJS, located in the Salt Lake City district of Kolkata, West Bengal, India, is a law university imparting legal education at the undergraduate and post graduate level. It was established in 1999 by the Indian legal education pioneer Dr. N. R. Madhava Menon, NUJS is one of the independent and autonomous national law schools built on the 5 year law degree model made popular by the National Law School of India, Bangalore. The Ex-Officio Chancellor of the University is the Chief Justice of India. The current Vice-Chancellor of this University is Prof. Mahendra P Singh, a renowned Constitutional law scholar.

The five year integrated B.A./B.Sc. LL.B.(Hons) Degree programme is the undergraduate course offered. While the post-graduate courses offered is the LL.M. degree. The University also offers doctoral degrees.

Contents

[edit] Philosophy

Prof Menon, the founder of NUJS
Prof Menon, the founder of NUJS

The objectives of the University inter alia are to:

  • Advance and disseminate learning and knowledge of law and legal processes and their role in national development
  • To develop in the student and research scholar a sense of responsibility to serve society by developing skills in regard to advocacy, legal service, legislation, law reforms and the like.
  • To promote inter-disciplinary study of law in relation to management, technology, inter national cooperation and development.

Legal Studies at NUJS aim at a comprehensive learning experience, not only in traditional fields of legal education, but in contemporary cutting edge disciplines as well. The course structure is in conformity with the rules prescribed by the Bar Council of India. The Founder Vice Chancellor Dr. N.R. Madhava Menon, established NUJS with an aim to produce "social engineers". According to him, NUJS is a law school, which attempts to transform legal education into "justice education", a concept which emphasizes on legal ethics and social responsibility of the legal profession.

[edit] The Campus

Dr. Ambedkar Bhavan (University Academic Block)
Dr. Ambedkar Bhavan (University Academic Block)

Dr. Ambedkar Bhavan (University Academic Block) is a beautiful edifice in stone. It is located on a prime land at Salt Lake City, overseeing the Eastern Metropolitan Bypass. The Campus consists of an academic and three residential blocks — two seven storied halls of residence for girls and boys apiece and a double storied staff accommodation cum guest house. The academic block is a four storied majestic structure, comprising of 105 rooms in all with lift facility. It is an inward looking building octagonal in shape and rounded by widespread verandas that open up to the vast central courtyard with a fountain on one side. The build ing has nearly everything a modern University ought to have — a host of Class rooms, a vast library with a sprawling reading room, medical facilities and an auditorium. There is a central library with each school of the University having its own specialized library. From its humble beginning on June 1,2000, the NUJS central library has taken great strides to cater to the academic needs of the undergraduate and postgraduate students and faculty, it now houses over 20,000 titles and subscribes around 109 journals. All authoritative titles are present on both Indian as well as international law. Books are acquired on not just the traditional fields of law. Emerging areas such as international trade, intellectual property and admiralty & shipping law have been given special attention. Over a hundred journals and over twenty foreign publications are subscribed to covering all the traditional as well as emerging areas of law, social sciences, and allied disciplines.

The book section of NUJS Library
The book section of NUJS Library

These include besides law, a vast range of connected subjects such as environment studies, current affairs, science, economics, and politics just to name a few. The university has also acquired back issues of all the leading case reporters and journals. In addition to books and periodicals, keeping in stride with the digital age, the library has procured 30 computers with dedicated Broadband Internet connection for research purpose. The library has enhanced its resources and databases of CDROM, which now includes Law Commission of India, SCC finder, ISID, SEBI guidelines, WTO reports etc. with the objective of eventually establishing an e-library. Such titles include case report databases, law archives and even electronic books on law. It is a matter of pride for the university that such resources have encouraged students to research comprehensively from the start. The library also keeps copies of research papers and moot court submissions of students. In order to give students and faculty more complete access to material, the NUJS library holds institutional memberships with leading libraries in the cities such as the British Council Library and the American Information Resource Center. Besides this, law students from other universities are encouraged to use the library for research and study.

The University Halls of Residence
The University Halls of Residence

The University insists that all students reside in the "University Halls of Residence" situated in the Campus. Admission to the hostels is done simultaneously with the admission to the University. Unless expelled for disciplinary or special reasons, students are expected to reside in the hostels for the entire duration of their course. The hostels provide reasonable amenities to the students and an atmosphere conductive to serious study, relaxation and all round development. The hostels have their own rules of discipline, which are primarily administered by the Wardens in association with students. Self-governance is encouraged for which powers are delegated to select student representatives. The hostel mess is managed by a Mess Committee formed from within the residents themselves, under the supervision of the warden. It provides hygienic food at affordable prices. Mess charges depend on actual expenses incurred per month and may vary.

The Front Entrance to the Academic Bloc
The Front Entrance to the Academic Bloc

There is a Doctor available for consultation, visiting the hostel regularly. This apart, the University organizes medical help whenever needed through tie-ups with hospitals located in the Salt Lake area. Guest Facilities There is provision for hostel residents to accommodate guests in situations of emergency for a maximum period of two nights on permission of the Warden and payment of a guest fee. Such guests may avail of the mess facilities. The Corporation Bank, a public sector undertaking, has opened a branch inside the campus and offers doorstep-banking facilities. An ATM facility is also available inside the campus.

[edit] Academic Schools & Research Centres

NUJS is organised into a number of Schools of study, each independent in conception and operation, yet integrated through programmes of teaching, research and extension activities. These schools of study include:

  • The School of Criminal Justice and Administration
  • The School of Technology, Law and Sustainable Development
  • The School of Legal Practice and Development
  • The School of Economic and Business Laws
  • The School of Social Sciences
  • The School of Private Laws and Comparative Jurisprudence
  • The School of Public Law and Governance.

The Research Centre's established at the University are:

  • The Centre for WTO
  • The Centre for Human Rights and Citizenship Studies
  • The Centre for Gender and Law.

The Schools and the Centres undertake several projects which are funded by the Government of India, the Department of Economic Affairs, the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests, the Ministry of Home Affairs,the United Nations Development Programme and the Ford Foundation, amongst others.

[edit] Courses on offer

The five year integrated B.A./B.Sc. LL.B.(Hons) Degree programme is the undergraduate course offered. While the post-graduate courses offered is the LL.M. degree. The University also offers doctoral degrees.

[edit] B.A./ B. Sc. LL. B (Hons.) Degree Programme

The undergraduate degree is undertaken directly after the Higher Secondary (10+2) or equivalent level. Admission is through an intensely competitive all-India National Admission Test (NAT)[1]. This programme attracts school leaving bright young aspirants to the field of law. The five- year undergraduate course is divided into ten semesters and enrolls 120 students every year. The students represent almost all the States of India and a few join from foreign countries. This programme offers advanced legal education with an emphasis on critical thinking and self-enquiry on the one hand and acquisition of practical skills and knowledge on the other. The eventual goal being to train the next generation of leaders in the academia, bar, judiciary and non—governmental organizations worldwide.

[edit] LL.M programme

The LL.M degree course is a two-year post graduate course. This programme is interested in attracting students who either wish to join the academia or seek to acquire advanced research skills before joining the legal profession. The students therefore come from a wide variety of back grounds with divergent legal interests and career plans. Our senior faculty members work closely with the students to help them in realising their full academic potential. We also actively involve students in our ongoing efforts to improve and enhance the programme. Together, we work to make each student’s experience in NUJS a rich and fulfilling one that broadens his or her intellec tual horizons. The LL.M. programme comprises a range of compulsory and optional courses and a disserta tion to be completed within a time frame of four semesters. In the first semester, the students are expected to complete three compulsory courses. In each of the second and third semesters, they have to complete three optional courses respectively. These courses are identified by the Post Graduate Council (PGC) of the University in consultation with its Faculty Council. Students are allowed to make their suggestions regarding choices/preferences of any subject or subjects to the PGC which is given due consideration. A dissertation is to be written in the fourth semester on an approved topic. The students are expected to make presentations on their dissertation one month in advance to their submission and also take up independent teaching assignments on certain subjects.

[edit] M.PHIL programme

The M. Phil Degree Programme is specifically designed for aspiring legal academics i.e., students who wish to pursue sustained independent study and research and are planning careers in law teaching. The Postgraduate Council (PGC) shall constitute an Advisory Committee of three members for each M.Phil student. Each student will be under the supervision of a Faculty member (Faculty Advisor) who will be identified according to his/her specialization in the field of law in consonance with the student’s topic for the dissertation. A work-plan is then to be chalked out l the Faculty Advisor, indicating the teaching, research, seminars and other assignments to be undertaken by the M. Phil student. This work-plan shall be executed by the student with prior approval from both the Faculty Council and the PGC. The candidate will be eligible for receipt of the degree only if he/she completes the prescribed requirements of the course within a maximum period of three years.

[edit] PHD and the LL.D programmes

The PhD and LL.D degrees are two of the most advanced law degrees. The candidates to these degrees are expected to produce a thesis that will constitute a substantial and valuable contribution to legal scholarship. The students would be expected to incorporate the insights of other disciplines into their work, drawing on the expertise and assistance not only available at NUJS but also from other leading universities of the world. The doctoral programme call for intense individual efforts requiring sustained discipline and self-direction. Since the doctoral programme are designed to train law teachers, having the opportunity to practice one’s teaching skills is critical. The candidate would therefore be given teaching assignments in addition to making presentations before the faculty community.

[edit] Vice Chancellors of NUJS

No. Vice Chancellor Took office Left office Career Highlights
01 Dr. N.R. Madhava Menon 2000 2004 Founder VC of NUJS • Founder of Legal Aid Society
02 B.S. Chimni 2004 2006 100% recruitment record in 2005, 2006 , 2007 • First and Second NUJS National Moot Court Competitions • First Convocation • First Durgadas Memorial Lecture.
03 Mahendra P Singh 2006 Incumbent

[edit] Seminars, Workshops, Conferences & Lectures

K.C. Basu Endowment Lecture

Prof Joseph Stiglitz delivered the fourth KC Basu endowment lecture
Prof Joseph Stiglitz delivered the fourth KC Basu endowment lecture

The K.C. Basu Endowment Lecture is an annual lecture instituted by Dr. Kaushik Basu, Professor of Economics, Cornell University in his father's name. The recurring theme of this Annual Lecture is Law & Economics. The Inaugural K.C. Basu Lecture was delivered by Nobel Prize winning Economist Amartya Sen in 2003, whose lecture was themed on the need to link Law & Economics.

In 2004, the Second K.C. Basu Lecture was delivered by Professor Pranab Bardhan, Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and co-chair of the MacArthur Foundation, whose lecture was themed on "Law & Economics in Developing Countries".

In 2006, the Third K.C. Basu Lecture was delivered by N. R. Narayana Murthy, Chairman, Infosys]] Technologies, on the theme "A Framework for Reforms in Higher Education in India".

The Fourth K. C. Basu Lecture was delivered in Jan 2007 by Nobel Prize winning Economist and Columbia University professor Joseph E. Stiglitz.

Durga Das Basu Memorial Lecture

The Inaugural Durga Das Basu Memorial Lecture has been instituted by the late Durga Das Basu's family in memory of the great Constitutional Law scholar. The Inaugural Lecture was delivered by Senior Advocate and eminent jurist Fali S. Nariman in 2005.

Ford Foundation Lecture on Human Rights

The Inaugural Ford Foundation Lecture on Human Rights was delivered in 2006 by the first Ford Foundation Chair Professor of Human Rights Law, Dr. (Prof.) Upendra Baxi, whose lecture was themed on the structural shift in the Indian judiciary's approach to protection of human rights.

Guest Lectures

Eminent legal luminaries and academicians regularly visit NUJS to deliver lectures. Visitors include Lord Robin Auld, Sir Igor Judge, Dr Frederick Erbisch, Justice Yacoob, Vandana Shiva, Mahasweta Devi, Biju Paul Abraham, Mrityunjoy Mohanty, Justice A.M. Bhattacharjee, Justice Moloy Sengupta, Vinod Kothari, M.P. Singh, K.N.C. Pillai

[edit] Alumni

The first batch of graduates from NUJS
The first batch of graduates from NUJS

A large number of graduates of NUJS have been recruited by premier law firms of the India by way of an entirely student run camus recruitment process. The law firms which have recruited from NUJS include Amarchand Mangaldas, AZB & Partners, Luthra & Luthra Law Offices, Trilegal, Economic Law Practice, Wadia Ghandy & Co. and many others. Among companies, ICICI Bank, Reliance Infocomm, Tata Sons, Infosys, Satyam, ITC and Dr. Reddy's Laboratories and many more were the major names which have recruited from campus.

However some graduates prefer not to sit for the recruitment process but rather decide to pursue higher education at the some of the premier universities abroad, such as Harvard Law School, Oxford University, Cambridge University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Warwick University, National University of Singapore, Stanford Law School, London School of Economics, New York University School of Law, the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, UC Berkeley, Tulane University etc.

[edit] Achievements

2005 Champions of Stetson International Environmental Law Moot Court Competition from WBNUJS, Kolkata with Professor Royal C. Gardner
2005 Champions of Stetson International Environmental Law Moot Court Competition from WBNUJS, Kolkata with Professor Royal C. Gardner

NUJS has had numerous honours in national and international Moot Court competitions. In 2003, NUJS became the only Indian and second Asian college to win the Willem C. Vis Moot better known as the Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot, held at Vienna.[2] In 2005 the University Moot team won the Willem C. Vis (East), International Commercial Arbitration Moot at Hong Kong.[3] The university Moot teams have been regularly attained finalist positions (ranking amongst the top 32 teams) in the competition, from its debut in 2003 till 2006. In 2005, NUJS also emmerged winners at the Stetson International Environmental Law Moot Court Competition at Stetson University Law School in Gulfport, Florida, USA[4]. Over the years the NUJS team has also performed exceedingly well at the Phillip C. Jessup International Law Moot at Washington D.C. In fact in 2004-05, the NUJS team won the Jessup (North Zone) National Rounds and participated at the International Rounds at Washington D.C., where they proceeded to the advanced rounds.

Besides the above, the University moot team has been a semi finalist at the Asia Pacific Round of the Manfred Lachs International Space Law Moot at Sydney, Australia. In the last two editions of the biannual Commonwealth Moot Court competition, the NUJS have won the national rounds on both occasions, earning a chance to represent India at the International rounds, and have been finalist and semifinalist at the International Rounds. In 2006, NUJS was selected to be one of the teams to represent India at the WTO Moot Court at Geneva, Switzerland and were semi-finalists in the oral rounds at the WTO Centre in Geneva.

The NUJS moot team which won the Manfred Lachs Space Law Moot competition
The NUJS moot team which won the Manfred Lachs Space Law Moot competition

Over the years the University Team have also won the Bar Council of India Moot, M.M. Singhvi Moot [5], Jodhpur, K.L.A. Moot, and many others.

NUJS also participates in a number of parliamentary debates at the international level, including the World Debating Championships (Worlds) and All Asian Debating Championship (Asians). The University team has won a number of national debates, "made the break" at the Asians and ranked high at the Worlds.

The students of NUJS also actively participate in a number of other extra-curricular activities like sports & dramatics.

A student of the first batch (the Class of 2005) received the prestigious Felix scholarship to Oxford, while another was the recipient of the Chevening scholarship. More recently, a student of the Class of 2006 received the Rhodes scholarship. Members of the class of 2006 also bagged other prestigious scholarships like the Vanderbilt Scholarship (NYU), Shell Centenary Scholarship(Oxford) and the J.N. Tata Endowment Scholarship.

[edit] Student Juridical Association

The student body of the University is known as the Student Juridical Association or SJA. The SJA has an elected president and vice president and two administrative office bearers, the administrative secretary and the treasurer. The SJA has an executive council which has representatives from the various student committees of the SJA and a class representative from each of the five years. The SJA has a number of committees for encouraging the extra-curricular activities among students, such as Moot Court Society, Cultural Committee, Literary and Debating Society, Sports Committee, etc.It was originally envisaged that the SJA would have a substatntial role in determining major student policies, there was considerable time and effort put into drafting of its constititution and the various policies by the founding members. But over the years the role of the SJA has been quite limited in affecting the student policies.

[edit] Journals Published

The University publishes its own peer reviewed law journal, Indian Journal of Juridical Sciences. While the SJA publishes a student run law journal, The Indian Juridical Reviewwith the help of a Faculty advisor and an Editorial Advisory Board.

[edit] Legal Aid Society

Yet another brain child of Prof. Menon, the founder of NUJS, the Legal Aid Society was set up in 2000 with the aim of providing basic legal education, awareness and counseling. This also provides students practical training and an opportunity to gain field experience in law. There are 15 student members with a faculty member who oversees all programs and guides the activities. There are several sub-committees, which individually take up and conduct programs with student participation. These committees have their individual projects and areas of work and these include:

  • Legal Aid Clinic & Counseling - The Legal Aid Clinic has been set up as a permanent body to provide free legal advice and resolution of disputes without long drawn and expensive litigation. This is done by providing legal and para-legal assistance. The clinic is presided over by the Faculty Advisor, Shri N.Konar, a former judge. Assistance is also provided by other former Judges in the faculty. The Clinic has been functional since 9th November, 2002 and has tendered advise to several cases.
  • Human Rights and Public Education - for empowering people through legal education and instilling in them consciousness about their rights and duties. This is done through field visits in semi-urban and rural areas as well as publicized seminars and workshops within the university itself.
  • Youth for Social Justice - A social awareness program that targets young people with the objective of ingraining in impressionable minds a sense of social justice.
  • Law Enforcement Assistance - This subcommittee works with law enforcement authorities such as the police, Government, pollution control board, for providing an interface to people in order to promote legal awareness and law-enforcement.
  • Para Legal Services and Training - The purpose of this activity is to build relationships with other agencies that work in the field such as NGOs, to facilitate exchange of information. The Society seeks to provide training and services in the form of documental consultancy and research to these agencies.
  • Public Interest Advocacy Support services - In the form of documentation, obtaining empirical data and other allied research are to be provided for public advocacy of popular concerns and Public interest Litigations.
  • Lok Adalat and ADR assistance - As part of its goal to encourage alternate dispute resolution, the Legal Aid Society organizes Lok Adalats in association with the W.B. Legal Aid Authority. Till date one Lok Adalat, specially for women was held in November 2003.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.telegraphindia.com/1050928/asp/careergraph/story_5291000.asp
  2. ^ http://www.cisg.law.pace.edu/cisg/moot/awards10.html
  3. ^ http://www.cityu.edu.hk/slw/cisgmoot/awards2005.html
  4. ^ http://www.law.stetson.edu/environmental/results2005.asp
  5. ^ http://nlujodhpur.ac.in/mmsinghvi.html

[edit] External links

Autonomous Law Schools in India
Gujarat National Law UniversityNational Law Institute UniversityNational Law School of India UniversityNational Law University, JodhpurWest Bengal National University of Juridical SciencesSymbiosis Society's Law CollegeNalsar University of Law • Amity Law School • ILS Law CollegeHidyatullah National Law UniversityTamil Nadu Dr. Ambedkar Law University • National University For Advanced Legal Studies • Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law • Ram Manohar Lohia Rashtriya Vidhi Sansthan • Chanakya National Law University
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