000 02694nam a2200229Ia 4500
999 _c35075
_d35075
003 OSt
005 20210629105605.0
008 160316s2013 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a978-9350353264
020 _a9789350359853
040 _cn
082 _a345.025320
_bDAS
100 _aDas P K
245 _aHandbook on new anti-rape law : Based on new criminal law amendment act, 2013 (13 of 2013)
260 _aNew Delhi
_bUniversal Law Publishing Co.Pvt.Ltd.
_c2013
300 _a472p
_cxix
365 _b Rs. 580
505 _aThe Offence of Rape has been dealt with under the Indian Penal Code not as a mere provision with a limited scope but has acquired a very wide dimension in terms of its definition as well as scope. The obvious reason is the challenge posed by the increasing number of instances of commission of such crimes in the society and a corresponding urgent need to re-impose the deterrent effect of our penal law. Even though the IPC was codified in the year 1860 i.e. about 157 years ago with provisions considered very stringent in terms of the punishments laid down for different offences therein, it has somewhere failed to achieve its purpose. The ever increasing number of such offences being committed in the society is the best evidence of its shortcomings. Perhaps, Indian societal humanitarian and ethical status are responsible for such uprise in criminal statistics. The legislature, executive, judges and lawyers on the one hand and our legal system on the other are well aware and conscious of the menace posed by such crimes. However, there is hardly any control over the commission of such heinous crimes. Further, the voice raised by the social activists, NGOs, women interest organisations, time and again in India and abroad, has also failed to yield any fruitful results at the ground level though it cannot be denied that a fight against such a heinous crime has to be a continuous one and not a mere one-time affair. Our judicial system even at the cost of being charged with ‘judicial activism’ has discharged its functions by acting in the most desirable manner not restraining itself from hearing the voice of conscience and thus delivered some landmark judgments going beyond the literal interpretation to the black letters of law. This has been done inter alia in the area of basic human rights of women. Keeping the above aspects in mind, this second edition of the book has been prepared by including the recent landmark judgments delivered by both the Supreme Court of India as well as the High Courts along with some relevant foreign courts judgments.
650 _a1. Rape - Criminal Law
700 _a
_a
942 _2ddc
_cBK