Saturday, June 26, 2021

Maha law varsity training India’s 1st batch of grads eligible to be judges


Maha law varsity training India’s 1st batch of grads eligible to be judges

Vaibhav.Ganjapure@timesgroup.com

Nagpur:26.06.2021 

The Maharashtra National Law University (MNLU-N) here is currently training the country’s first batch of 40 students, who would be eligible to directly become judges after completing their five-year BA LLB (honours) degree in ‘adjudication and justicing’.

The graduates would need to clear the examinations conducted by the public service commissions of respective states, like MPPSC in Maharashtra, to be recruited as judges. “This is the first such course in India. The batch has been selected after a rigorous process. Besides clearing Common Law Admission Test (CLAT), they were subjected to group discussions and then interviewed by a panel of eminent high court judges,” MNLU chancellor Justice Bhushan Gavai told TOI.

The course was the brainchild of former CJI Sharad Bobde, also the first MNLU chancellor, who had proposed a National Judicial Academy (NJA) on the lines of National Defence Academy (NDA) to train law students in the art of judging. TOI was the first to report the proposed NJA on August 19, 2019.

Justice Gavai, also a Supreme Court judge, added these 40 students would be trained in such a way that they are ready to discharge duties of a judicial officer on graduating. “We’re making efforts to get permission from the government to allow them to appear in public service commission exams when they reach their final year. This way they can be directly recruited, after graduating.”

MNLU executive council member Justice Ravindra Chavan, who helped draft the syllabus, said these students could fill the vacuum of good judges in lower judiciary. “They would be trained in all aspects of judiciary, including understanding the case properly, applying relevant provisions of the law, and developing a vision to dispense justice.”

Vice-chancellor Vijender Kumar said due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the admissions were delayed and the course started in October last year. “These students were selected by a panel of HC judges. The teaching methodology for them is different from other students. We are also training our teachers in subjects related to justicing. Since these students hail from 10 states, including the Northeast, we’re training them in a way that they can appear in any judicial exam after their graduation,” he added.



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