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Therapeutic Jurisprudence and Healing-Centered Jurisprudence
Abstract This article traces the origins and development of therapeutic jurisprudence and healing-centred jurisprudence, two movements that have transformed the face of law by proposing a move from penal to restorative and rehabilitative paradigms of justice. Therapeutic jurisprudence, pioneered by David Wexler in 1987, focuses on the psychology of law processes and draws attention to…
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Platonic Leaks, Tectonic Threats: Vec2Vec, A New Challenge To Data Pseudonymization
A recent paper by the Department of Computer Science of Cornell University introduces a novel unsupervised method, titled Vec2Vec, that allows embeddings from different models to be mapped with high similarities despite variations in their architecture, size, or training data. This article discusses how this development challenges present notions of consent and data pseudonymization in…
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Intersectionality In Carceral Spaces: Rights Of Women Prisoners In India
“A prison is a place of punishment, deterrence and reformation.”– Jeremy Bentham Prisons are often imagined as neutral spaces, maybe sites of punishment, rehabilitation, and legal accountability. However, in reality, they are deeply engraved with the unequal social fabric of the society that defines who is policed, prosecuted, and imprisoned. Women who belong particularly to…
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Implications Of National Emergency On The Enforcement Of Article 19: A Constitutional Analysis
The Indian Constitution, the supreme regulatory document in the country, provides its citizens with fundamental rights under Part III. Fundamental rights are a set of basic human rights that are essential for a person to live his/her life with dignity. While the constitution provides the citizens with these rights it also has made certain provisions…