TY - GEN AU - Pal, Samaraditya AU - Sarkar, Deepan Kumar TI - India's Constitution origins and evolution: Constituent Assembly debates, Lok Sabha debates on constitutional amendments and Supreme Court judgments Vol 8 SN - 9788131253922 U1 - 342.5402 PY - 2018/// CY - Gurgaon PB - Lexis Nexis Publications KW - India-Parliament-Lok Sabha KW - Constitutional conventions India KW - Constitutional history India N1 - Article 227 Article 228 Article 229 Article 230 Article 231 Article 233 Article 233A Article 234 Article 235 Article 236 Article 237 Article 239 to 241 Part VIII : The Union Territories Article 243, 243 A-243O, 243P-ZG Part IX : The Panchayats Part IXA : The Municipalities Article 243ZA to 243ZT Part IXB : The Co-Operative Societies Article 244 and 244A Part X : The Schedules and Tribal Areas Distribution of Legislative Powers Article 245 & 246 Part XI : Relations Between the Union and the State Chapter 1 : Legislative Relations Distribution of Legislative Powers Article 246A, 269A and 279A Article 247 Article 248 Article 249 Article 250 Article 251 Article 252 Article 253 Article 254 Article 255 General Article 256 Chapter II : Administrative Relations Article 257 Article 258 and 258A Article 260 Article 261 Disputes Relating to Waters Article 262 Co-ordination between States Article 263 General Article 264 Part XII Finance, Property, Contracts and Suits Chapter I : Finance General Articles 265, 266 and 267 Appendices Appendix I to III Subject Index N2 - The Volume has dealt with Articles 227 to 267 and also Articles 269A and 279A. In fact, 246A, 269A and 279A have been considered together in one Chapter for the convenience of the readers as these Articles were inserted by the Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act, 2016 to integrate the concept of the Goods and Services Tax into our Constitution. Volume covers multiple important Articles and we have tried to cover the relevant debates (both in the Constituent Assembly and Lok Sabha) and judgments of the Supreme Court in as much detail as possible. However, as the number of volumes has increased to more than what was originally conceived of when the project was initiated, we thought economy of space has to be factored by at least limiting the length of this preface and those volumes which follow. Therefore, we have also consciously avoided repeating judgment extracts and extracts from the Lok Sabha Debates in multiple chapters and employed the use of cross-references. We have also refrained from including those debates which we felt are not of any substantive importance. However, we have taken care to ensure that none of these measures compromise with the quality of the volume. We hope that lawyers, scholars, other professionals and students will all find this volume useful. ---Lawbookshop.net ER -