印度财产权的演变:法律与发展的视角

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW Law and Development Review Pub Date : 2020-11-17 DOI:10.1515/ldr-2020-0081
R. Venkatesan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

产权在任何司法管辖区都是有争议的。1950年印度宪法第31条(“条款”)将财产权作为一项基本权利,但在印度,财产权经历了一段特别动荡的法律和政治历史。它是制宪会议中辩论次数第二多的条款,是宪法中修改次数最多的条款,也是唯一被删除的基本权利。这条的历史通常被理解为源于追求社会主义的议会和保护个人自由的司法机构之间的意识形态制度冲突。然而,从“法律与发展”的角度看待该条及其最初的修正案,可以对当前的“冲突”叙事进行批判,并为第31条的历史提供另一种解释。这篇论文认为,《印度宪法》的痛苦不是来自于追求专制的社会主义计划或平等主义的社会革命,而是来自于印度通过“被动革命”过程寻求经济现代化的背景。该条款加强了征用权的权力,授权国家通过重组在殖民主义时期沿着生产资本主义路线建立的半封建前资本主义产权制度,使工业和农业的经济关系现代化。在这一过程中,《里斯本条约》有助于巩固发展中国家在经济政策领域的权力;确立了国家、市场和个人的关系;并帮助塑造了印度的私有产权制度。因此,理解印度基本财产权的演变,不仅讲述了印度发展故事的关键部分,而且通过在其框架内吸收不同的历史经验,为“法律与发展”文学做出了贡献,正如批评者长期以来所争论的那样,这种框架往往具有强烈的欧洲中心偏见。
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The Evolution of the Right to Property in India: From a Law and Development Perspective
Abstract Property rights are contentious in any jurisdiction. But the right to property in India, adopted as a fundamental right in Article 31 of the Constitution of the India, 1950 (“Article”), has had a particularly tumultuous legal and political history. It holds the distinction of being the second most debated Article in the Constituent Assembly, the most amended provision of the Constitution and the only fundamental right to ever be deleted. The history of the Article is commonly understood as arising from an ideological institutional conflict between a Parliament in pursuit of socialism and a judiciary safeguarding individual freedoms. However, looking at the Article and its initial amendments from a “law and development” perspective provides a critique of the current narrative of “conflict” and offers an alternative interpretation of the history of Article 31. The paper argues that rather than arising from the pursuit of either authoritarian socialist planning or an egalitarian social revolution, the travails of the Article came in the context of India’s quest for economic modernity through a process of “passive revolution”. The powers of eminent domain reinforced in the Article empowered the state to modernise economic relations in industry and agriculture by restructuring a semi-feudal pre-capitalist property rights regime established during colonialism along productive capitalist lines. In this process, the Article helped to consolidate the powers of the developmental state in the domain of economic policy; forged the relationship between state, market and the individual; and helped shape the regime of private property rights in India. Understanding the evolution of the fundamental right to property in India therefore, not only tells a key part of India’s development story but also contributes to the “law and development” literature by assimilating diverse historical experiences within its framework, which, as critics have long argued, tends to have a strong Eurocentric bias.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Law and Development Review (LDR) is a top peer-reviewed journal in the field of law and development which explores the impact of law, legal frameworks, and institutions (LFIs) on development. LDR is distinguished from other law and economics journals in that its primary focus is the development aspects of international and domestic legal orders. The journal promotes global exchanges of views on law and development issues. LDR facilitates future global negotiations concerning the economic development of developing countries and sets out future directions for law and development studies. Many of the top scholars and practitioners in the field, including Professors David Trubek, Bhupinder Chimni, Michael Trebilcock, and Mitsuo Matsushita, have edited LDR issues and published articles in LDR. The journal seeks top-quality articles on law and development issues broadly, from the developing world as well as from the developed world. The changing economic conditions in recent decades render the law and development approach applicable to economic issues in developed countries as well as developing ones, and LDR accepts manuscripts on law and economic development issues concerning both categories of countries. LDR’s editorial board includes top scholars and professionals with diverse regional and academic backgrounds.
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