Criminalization of Peaceful Expressions and Law of Sedition in India

Authors

Downloads

Keywords:

Sedition, Free Speech, Democracy, India

Abstract

Earlier Sec. 124 A of IPC, 1860 used to deal with ‘Sedition’. Now, it has been removed. However, Section 152 of BNS, 2023 criminalizes the acts that ‘incite secession, armed rebellion, or subversive activities, separatist activities that endanger India’s sovereignty, unity, and integrity’. Sedition punishes material that incites hate, contempt, or disaffection for the government because it might cause vehemence or public disorder. Criticizing government legislation or administration is not seditious. It is a highly condemned and controversial provision that is principally employed to conquer discord in politics. It allegedly restricts free speech and expression. The government must define the jurisprudential limits of sedition law or it will be misused and the state unable to guarantee free speech and democracy. This article explores the justification for outlawing sedition before placing India’s experience in historical perspective in light of its colonial background and current regime. The law’s usage as a political tool is discussed in the article’s conclusion, and it is debated as to whether it should be abolished or changed in order to save Indian democracy from a crisis of the rule of law.

Readership Data

🌐

Refreshing Cached Analytics Data

The cached analytics data has become stale and journal.thelawbrigade.com is making a fresh request to fetch the latest data from Google Analytics. This may take 20-30 seconds depending on the server response time from Google Analytics. Please do not close the browser during this time. We appreciate your patience.

Published

09-02-2025

License

Copyright © 2026 by Saumya Verma

The copyright and license terms mentioned on this page take precedence over any other license terms mentioned on the article full text PDF or any other material associated with the article.

How to Cite

Verma, Saumya. “Criminalization of Peaceful Expressions and Law of Sedition in India”. Commonwealth Law Review Journal, vol. 10, Feb. 2025, pp. 128-45, https://journal.thelawbrigade.com/clrj/article/view/600.

Similar Articles

21-30 of 132

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.