P-ISSN: 2789-9497, E-ISSN: 2789-9500
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2024, Vol. 4, Issue 1, Part B

Extradition laws in India: A journey from the extradition act, 1903 to the fugitive economic offenders Act, 2018


Author(s): Dr. Vivek Kumar Gupta

Abstract: This exploration paper digs into the verifiable turn of events and contemporary meaning of removal regulation in India. It looks at the development of India's removal regulation, spreading over from the frontier period Removal Demonstration of 1903 to the new Outlaw Monetary Guilty parties Demonstration of 2018. The review gives an exhaustive examination of the vital achievements in Indian removal regulation, including the Removal Demonstration of 1962 and the Removal Change Demonstration of 1993.The paper explains the many-sided methodology engaged with both removal to and from India, revealing insight into the jobs played by different partners, like judges, legislative organizations, and the legal executive. Moreover, it investigates the difficulties and intricacies related with removal demands, including issues connected with respective relations, correspondence, unfamiliar purview regulations, and common liberties concerns. The sacred parts of removal are likewise investigated, with an emphasis on India's protected arrangements, for example, Articles 51, 73, and 253, which effect its removal associations with different countries. The job of the Code of Criminal Technique 1973 in administering removal procedures is clarified, underlining pertinent segments, for example, Area 41, Area 166A, Segment 166B, and Segment 188.The review finishes up by analyzing worldwide model regulations on removal, with specific accentuation on the Unified Countries Model Arrangement on Removal (1990) and the Assembled Countries Model Regulation on Removal (2004), and their effect on Indian removal rehearses. Furthermore, it frames India's support in multilateral shows connected with removal, giving a far reaching outline of India's worldwide removal commitments. This examination paper fills in as an important asset for legitimate researchers, professionals, and policymakers keen on understanding the verifiable, lawful, and reasonable components of removal regulation in India. It highlights the intricacies and difficulties in the field of removal while featuring India's obligation to global participation in tending to transnational crimes.

DOI: 10.22271/27899497.2024.v4.i1b.80

Pages: 149-155 | Views: 373 | Downloads: 189

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International Journal of Criminal, Common and Statutory Law
How to cite this article:
Dr. Vivek Kumar Gupta. Extradition laws in India: A journey from the extradition act, 1903 to the fugitive economic offenders Act, 2018. Int J Criminal Common Statutory Law 2024;4(1):149-155. DOI: 10.22271/27899497.2024.v4.i1b.80
International Journal of Criminal, Common and Statutory Law
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