Paryaya July 2015
Paryaya July 2015
Paryaya July 2015
July 2015
Empathy, Craft and other Lessons to Learn from the US Same-Sex Marriage
Decision
The Court recounts James Obergefell's
struggle to be listed as the surviving
spouse on his partner's death certificate,
the uncertainty that an unmarried status
created in the lives of April DeBoer and
Jayne Rowse with respect to their children,
and the burden endured by Ijpe DeKoe and
Thomas Kostura who lost their marital
status every time they returned to their
home state of Tennessee.
The Court notes these stories to highlight the urgency of the matter, one which can
only be done by putting a human face to the issue. This display of empathy stands in
stark contrast to a different kind of 'landmark' - the much denigrated Suresh Kumar
Koushal judgment of December 2013 that effectively recriminalized intimate lives of
LGBT persons in India. There is much that the Koushal judges - and the judiciary as
whole - could learn from reading the Obergefell decision. Read More
Read More
Piracy fear-mongering stars of Premam and Papanasam, meet those
who disagree with you
For years now, folks at the Alternative Law Forum in Bengaluru have been trying to
convince the film and music industry, among others, that piracy isn't as economically
destructive as it is perceived and it might not even really be the problem. A hint for
our friends from Kerala and Tamil Nadu who wear socialism as a badge with pride,
their argument runs on the same lines as yours.
The argument against piracy is couched in the virtues of private intellectual property,
the idea that the creations of the minds - like literature, art, design and inventions are the property of the persons who used their minds to create, and that they have
exclusive rights over it. Read More
Sex, sex workers and the city - The double standards of desire and
respectability in Bengaluru
"When a city changes, it changes for some people, and against others. Sex workers are
being seen as dirt, as matter that is out of place in the pre-determined order of things.
(By driving them away from certain areas) you are implicitly saying who the city is for,
but that is against the spirit of a city. Driving away these diverse groups of people hits
at the idea of difference. A city is where you meet difference," says Darshana Mitra, a
lawyer with ALF.
Read More
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