<div>This yearbook is a compilation of thematically arranged essays that critically analyse</div><div>emerging developments, issues, and perspectives across different branches of law. It</div><div>consists of research from scholars around the world with the view that comparative</div><div>study would initiate dialogue on law and legal cultures across jurisdictions. The themes</div><div>vary from jurisprudence of comparative law and its methodologies to intrinsic details</div>of specific laws like memory laws. The sites of the enquiries in different chapters are<div>different legal systems, recent judgements, and aspects of human rights in a comparative</div><div>perspective. It comprises seven parts wherein the first part focuses on general themes</div><div>of comparative law, the second part discusses private law through a comparative lens,</div><div>and the third, fourth and fifth parts examine aspects of public law with special focus</div>on constitutional law, human rights and economic laws. The sixth part engages with<div>criminal law and the last part of the book covers recent developments in the field of</div><div>comparative law. This book intends to trigger a discussion on issues of comparative</div><div>law from the vantage point of Global South, not only focusing on the Global North.</div><div>It examines legal systems of countries from far-east and sub-continent and presents</div><div>insights on their working. It encourages readers to gain a nuanced understanding of</div><div>the working of law, legal systems and legal cultures, adding to existing deliberations</div><div>on the constituents of an ideal system of law.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div>