"I Know It When I See It": Obscenity And The Indian Judiciary
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Abstract
Any judicial or legislative overture the application of which will curtail the constitutionally
guaranteed fundamental right of an individual must undergo scrutiny and the grounds of such a
restriction must find their rationale in a clearly demarcated objective, and the restriction itself should
be proportional to such objective. In this Article, the authors argue for importing this principle into
the law on obscenity which is, at present, a murky domain, and is vulnerable to exploitation by
political parties and dominant social groups for the furtherance of their self-perpetuating
propaganda. To this end, the authors have studied obscenity laws of various jurisdictions and
analysed them in the context of the Indian legal position. A critical appraisal of the most recent
judgement on obscenity, Aveek Sarkar v. Union of India, has been undertaken so as to
comprehensively understand and scrutinise the contemporary requirements for a reform in the
legislative provisions. Discerning therein the inconsistencies and ambiguities in the law on obscenity,
the authors have called for a substantive overhaul of the law. The Article concludes with a detailed
section on recommendations where the authors have put forth certain suggestions in the form of broad
guidelines and a test, adherence to which, the authors opine would lead to a more rational, just and
progressive application of the law on obscenity.
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NLUJ Law Review 1 (2015)
