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Thursday, November 12, 2020

Legal language in India is filled with jargon

 

Legal language in India is sometimes beyond understanding, often boring. George Orwell may have the solution.


Subhash Vijayran (a lawyer) has recently filed a PIL in Supreme Court (Subhash Vijayran vs Union of India). He wants the legislature and executive to use plain English in drafting laws, the Bar Council to introduce plain English in law curricula and the Supreme Court to only allow concise and precise pleadings. He begins the synopsis to the writ petition in the following way. “The writing of most lawyers is: (1) wordy, (2) unclear, (3) pompous and (4) dull. We use eight words to say what can be said in two. We use arcane phrases to express commonplace ideas.” Reacting to the plea, the Supreme Court has asked the Ministry of Law and Justice and Bar Council to respond. Everyone will empathise with Vijayran. But he avoided mentioning the judiciary, though lawyers do turn judges sometimes.

A landlord was trying to evict a tenant. In this suit, in 2016, the Himachal Pradesh High Court ruled: “Even if assumingly no efficacious evidence nor any evidence of cogent worth may stand adduced qua the defendants raising any obstruction upon the suit land yet the decree of permanent prohibitory injunction dehors any obstructive act done by the defendants during the pendency of the suit before the learned trial Court or during the pendency of the appeal before the first appellate Court also dehors no scribed relief in consonance therewith standings prayed for by the plaintiffs would not estop this court to permit the executing court to carry the mandate of the conclusively recorded decree of permanent prohibitory injunction pronounced qua the plaintiffs, conspicuously when thereupon the mandate of the conclusively recorded decree pronounced qua the suit land would beget consummation besides would obviate its frustration.” Alternatively, “For facilitating its consummation, though the learned executing Court stood enjoined to pronounce an appropriate order, contrarily it by relegating the impact of the aforesaid germane factum probandum comprised in the enforceable executable conclusive decree, has inaptly dismissed the execution petition.” The entire judgment is like this and I can quote paragraph after paragraph on what is nothing but gibberish.

Such an offensive statement might expose me to Contempt of Courts Act of 1971, since anyone who “scandalises or tends to scandalise, or lowers or tends to lower the authority of, any court” is culpable. But I am protected because when the aggrieved landlord appealed before Supreme Court, two judges of the Supreme Court said, “It is not possible to comprehend the contents of the impugned order passed by the High Court.” The Himachal High Court judgment is not an outlier. Here is another judgment from the Supreme Court (Subramanian Swamy vs Union of India). “This batch of writ petitions preferred under Article 32 of the Constitution of India exposits cavil in its quintessential conceptuality and percipient discord between venerated and exalted right of freedom of speech and expression of an individual, exploring manifold and multi-layered, limitless, unbounded and unfettered spectrums, and the controls, restrictions and constrictions, under the assumed power of ‘reasonableness’ ingrained in the statutory provisions relating to criminal law to reviver and uphold one’s reputation.” I didn’t understand what this means. The next sentence, which I did understand, had only 227 words. I wonder what Lord Denning, or any copy editor, would have made of these.When asking the Ministry of Law and Justice and Bar Council to respond, the Chief Justice of India referred to Anthony Burgess’s book (1964) Language Made Plain. There are a host of books on plain English — Martin Cutts, Ernest Gowers, Fern Rook, Joseph Williams, Richard Wydick — apart from to-do kits. My favourite happens to be George Orwell’s 1946 essay, Politics and the English Language, which was primarily directed against the Soviet Union. “As soon as certain topics are raised, the concrete melts into the abstract and no one seems able to think of turns of speech that are not hackneyed: Prose consists less and less of words chosen for the sake of their meaning, and more and more of phrases tacked together like the sections of a prefabricated hen-house… A mass of Latin words falls upon the facts like soft snow, blurring the outlines and covering up all the details.” Prima facie, inter alia, ipso facto, ab initio and ad hoc, it seems to me that court judgments also display actus reus and mens rea. Much before Plain English books, George Orwell set out six principles. “(i) Never use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print. (ii) Never use a long word where a short one will do. (iii) If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out. (iv) Never use the passive where you can use the active. (v) Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent. (vi) Break any of these rules sooner than say anything barbarous.” Copy editors routinely use these principles, but not the judiciary.

If you like an indigenous template, the Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy produced a manual on plain language drafting in 2017. Why are judgments so verbose? George Orwell was perceptive. “When you are composing in a hurry — when you are dictating to a stenographer, for instance, or making a public speech it is natural to fall into a pretentious, Latinised style.” Typically, judges don’t write judgments. They dictate them. No one writes like that, even with a keyboard. This is Isaac Pitman’s legacy. I mean legatum.

Bibek Debroy


This article first appeared in the print edition on November 12, 2020 under the title ‘The plain truth’. The writer is chairman, Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister. Views are personal

Source: Indian Express, 12/11/20

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Quote of the Day November 10, 2020

 “The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain.”

‐ Dolly Parton

“मेरा दृष्टिकोण तो यह है कि आप इंद्रधनुष चाहते हैं तो आपको वर्षा सहन करनी ही होगी।”

‐ डॉली पार्टन

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 55, Issue No. 45, 07 Nov, 2020

How different are the brains of birds from those of mammals?

 Ravens recognise themselves in a mirror, and these birds are known to even plan for the future. Studies have shown that pigeons can be taught to recognise English words and can learn spellings.

Now, another study (Science, September 2020) shows that birds have a more organised brain than previously thought. The cognitive skills of mammals are related to the cerebral cortex. But birds don’t have this cerebral cortex, they have a region called the pallium, and studies on this region have now revealed new information on its architecture.

Using a special technique called 3D polarised light imaging, the team studied the orientation of individual nerve fibres. They studied the brains of 42 homing pigeons, nine barn owls, a rat, a vervet monkey and one human. They found that the brains of the birds had an organisation similar to that seen in mammalian brains. The fibres were seen to be arranged horizontally and vertically, just like how they are arranged in the neocortex region of the mammal brain. They conducted another study to examine the interconnection of cells in the sensory areas of bird brain and found connections similar to mammal brains.

According to the team of researchers led by Martin Stacho from Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany, there is a possibility that both mammals and birds independently developed similar microcircuits by means of convergent or parallel evolution. The study addresses how mammals and birds perform such similar perceptual and cognitive feats.

Source: The Hindu, 7/11/20

Think beyond books

 

Our world is full of opportunities and complex patterns, and only students who are capable of seamlessly tapping into their cognitive and non-cognitive skills can get ahead in the race. But, what are these cognitive and non-cognitive skills?

Cognitive skills are brain-based and enable the child to carry out any task from the simplest to the most complex. They have more to do with the mechanism of how he/she learns, remembers, pays attention, or his/her approach to problem solving, rather than with bookish knowledge.

For example, opening the door when the bell rings involves perception (hearing the bell), decision-making (deciding to open the door or not), language skill (asking who is at the door), motor skills (unlocking the door), and social skill (interpreting the tone and interacting with the person).

Non-cognitive skills include memory, language, interpersonal skills, verbal and non-verbal communication, emotional maturity, persistence, empathy, and others. So, why is the integration of cognitive and non-cognitive skills required?

The two help create a strategic balance in the mind, enabling a person to complete any task effectively and efficiently.

With only one kind of skill set, chances of success reduce. Work environments have become dynamic and involve interaction with people from different disciplines, and tackling various situations.

Also, it is quite difficult to inculcate non-cognitive skills in an individual after a certain age. Apart from that, the integration of cognitive and non-cognitive skills also helps students in their personal lives and professional lives.

Challenges of non-integration

Unemployablity: Many individuals are hired even though they do not possess non-cognitive skills. But this lack makes it difficult for him/her to interact with colleagues in a work environment, as they cannot create connections with others.

Inability to adapt: The lack of non-cognitive skills may also mean that a person is unable to match the expectations of the superiors or teachers. Also since they are not adaptable by nature, their growth tends to stagnate.

Mental health issues: The lack of a balance between the two skill sets may also lead to anxiety and depression as the individuals may find many situations unmanageable and perplexing.

How to integrate

Address the first challenge: The current curriculum is non-dynamic and does not allow participation in activities that help develop both skills. There is an immediate need to redesign it to integrate activities and practices that will help integrate the skill sets.

Evaluation and assessment: With the redesigned curriculum, schools can incorporate assessment practices to evaluate the students’ growth and development, as they grasp the knowledge and power of non-cognitive skills.

Teaching and learning methodologies: Help students develop non-cognitive skills, and provide sufficient training from the beginning, as students can be moulded easily at a young age.

Train the trainers: Teachers need to be educated in order to educate the students. Thus, schools must have sessions for teachers to learn how to teach both cognitive and non-cognitive skills.

The writer is COO, ODM Educational Group

Source: The Hindu, 7/11/20

Next Bihar govt should transform administrative machinery into being responsive and people oriented

 

Lessons have to be learnt from the past, difficult decisions taken, quick-fixes avoided


Whichever party or combination forms the next government in Bihar in the next few days has to avoid some intractable mistakes being made across the country over the last three decades. Joe Biden, in his victory speech, spoke about leading not just with the example of their power, but by the power of their example. Where does Bihar stand on that parameter?

All parties are competing to roll out more and more freebies to a majority of the population — often undeserved and without a sunset. There are scant plans for long-term capital formation and employment generation. What began in the 1980s as a small measure to help the old, the poor and the infirm, has degenerated into a race to empty the treasury by doling out more and more cash into households and even offering utensils, colour TVs and gold for daughters’ weddings in some states. The focus on educating her, improving her employability and empowering her, is absent. Farm loan waivers and unemployment allowances are becoming the norm. What is the example being set?What is the power being wielded?

The next government must look at the state of the economy and its own administrative capability before committing to any major long-term populist (but unproductive) expenditure. While the last two decades in India have seen buoyancy in government receipts, the ability to splurge for the new government in Bihar is going to be seriously constrained during the next few years, mainly due to COVID-related economic shocks. Lift the hood and the statistics are stark: Bihar’s per capita net state domestic product in 2019-20 was just Rs 46,664, against the national average of Rs 1,34,226: A mere 34.7 per cent. In spite of higher yearly growth in the last 10 years, this ratio has moved only by 0.4 per cent (from 34.3 per cent to 34.7 per cent) during this period. We had a low base to start from, which makes for attractive percentages, but when it comes to even catching up with the rest of the country, it is inconceivable how many decades it would take.

While agricultural production has shown encouraging improvement, Bihar does not manufacture anything of consequence. Poverty continues to be high and unemployment much above the national average. The manufacturing sector’s contribution to Bihar’s economy is just 8.7 per cent of the national average. Data for 2017-18 shows that a mere 1.5 per cent of the nation’s factories are registered in Bihar; the needle on fixed capital formation has remained static on 0.6 per cent for over a decade. FDI in the state in 2019-20 was a mere 0.01 per cent of the national average, and Bihar’s rank in ease of doing business was 26 in 2019. Entrepreneurship seems to be systematically discouraged in the state. Bihar is the only major state in the country from where not a single company was trading on the BSE or NSE in 2017. Private equity or venture fund investments in the state are nearly nil.

Bihar continues to be the Gangotri supplying unskilled labour to the rest of India. It is a sad refrain that still rings true — a Bihari must leave Bihar to make it. Highly educated and accomplished Biharis are making significant contributions in different parts of the world in IT, finance, medicine and engineering. A young person, Amanullah, recently started a small initiative of creating an alumni group of the once prestigious Patna Science College. Hundreds of Biharis from across the world offered to help out. The next government needs to create conditions to tap this resource to initiate a reverse brain-drain.But a look at the manifestos in this election paints a disappointing picture. The BJP has promised to create conditions for 19 lakh jobs — 4 lakh directly in government — and provide free COVID vaccines for all. The RJD has promised 10 lakh direct jobs in the government, loan waiver for farmers and unemployment allowance to the youth. The Congress and JD(U) have promised unemployment allowance and farm loan waiver. The LJP has promised to construct a Sita temple, among other things. Is that the best we can do for the people of Bihar? Temples, loan waivers and unemployment benefits? Is this the future Biharis are clamouring for?

Besides the obvious worry (who pays for this), a key concern is the state’s capacity to even execute these promises. While lakhs of jobs in the government have been promised, the fact is that for decades, no major recruitment has taken place in the state without controversies around nepotism, mismanagement and corruption. It is not uncommon for candidates waiting for results to be announced even three or four years after their recruitment tests. Officials of the agencies conducting recruitment have landed in jails and endless litigation has taken years to resolve — often reaching the Supreme Court.

Our exaggerated faith in DBT is getting exposed in scandals in schemes like distribution of scholarships and mid-day meals. The new government will have to internalise that while technology can be a great enabler, it can only go thus far. For a state once proud of its administrative machinery, today the population faces harassment, lack of accountability and sensitivity. The core tenets of command, supervision and grievance redressal appear to have broken down. Higher levels of administrative supervision and accountability at all levels have to be ensured before any big ticket expenditure programmes are launched.The next government must tackle head-on the reluctance amongst all the political parties to grapple with fundamental issues of economic stagnation, lack of employment opportunities, absence of private investment and administrative decline. The solutions will require deep structural changes, often difficult and unpopular.

It will not bring immediate results and will require support from all sections of society. The confrontational social and political sentiments generated during the election will have to make way for an effort to build consensus for an economic revival. My call to the next government is to work towards transforming the administrative machinery into being responsive, sensitive and people oriented. Its task is to create an environment for private investment, improve productivity and value addition in agriculture, education, healthcare and industry. It has to lead by example. It is incumbent upon it to do so.

This article first appeared in the print edition on November 10, 2020 under the title ‘Government Bihar needs’. The writer is former chairperson of SEBI

Source: Indian Express, 10/11/20

Friday, November 06, 2020

Quote of the Day November 6, 2020

 “Loneliness is the ultimate poverty.”

‐ Abigail Van Buren

“अकेलापन निर्धनता की पराकाष्ठा है।”

‐ एबिगैल वैन ब्यूरेन