- division of executive and legislative powers between the Union and the individual States;
- role of the Supreme Court and State high courts;
- role of State legislative assemblies;
- levels of appeals in judiciary system;
- power of specialized State tribunals in, for example, tax, company law, bankruptcy;
- power of the State to appropriate property;
- constitutional protection of culture and environment;
- use and citation of foreign judgments and jurisprudence;
- contract law;
- trusts;
- industrial relations;
- minimum wage law;
- income tax rules and procedure;
- bilateral double taxation agreements;
- copyright and trademark protection;
- semiconductor integrated circuits layout design;
- protection of plant varieties and farmers' rights;
- competition law;
- multi-State cooperation agreements; and
- regulation of financial services.
An extensive appendix supplies texts of the Constitution of India, the Indian Penal Code and 23 Legislative Acts pertaining to commercial, customs and tax matters. There is a sample franchise agreement, and an informative summary of current and projected foreign trade policy through 2014. Both as a guide to business lawyers working with Indian partners and as a comparative law treatment of the world's second most populous country (and a rapidly growing economic powerhouse), this book has no peers.