![]() ![]() The law belongs to the people and access to legal system is a basic right and for public good. Why should general public be interested or allowed to witness court proceedings? Keeping this in mind, I set out to research the various means by which I can enter the Supreme Court of India. Hence if I want to visit the Supreme Court, I will be considered a member of the general public rather than an intern of a Supreme Court lawyer who would have access to the premises for doing their work. As for me, I am not interning under any advocate who practices in the Supreme Court and I want to witness the proceedings before the court. However, on account of modernisation and advent ofthe internet, relative ease of transportation and increasing number of internships, such exposure may not be necessary and students should take their own initiative to see the Supreme Court. In the past some colleges used to organize educational trips to the Supreme Court or High Courts. ![]() ![]() Every advocate on the rolls of Bar Council would have gone through numerous judgements of the Supreme Court of India but I am sure that not all advocates in the country had the opportunity to visit the Supreme Court although all litigators dream of arguing before it one day. Of course, it is the dream of every law student to visit the Supreme Court of India at least once. It has been a week since I arrived in Delhi to intern with a law firm. I am a law student and I am from Bangalore. Over to Madan, a law student from ILS, Pune and an IDIA scholar. A law student visiting Delhi wants to visit the citadel of Judicial power and legal system in India, and is weighing his options. ![]()
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