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A civilizational legal assessment of the events of 1946 and their constitutional implications.
The Ideological Motive Coding Framework for national-security and constitutional systems.
A quick window into India’s ancient knowledge systems Vedas, Shastras, Sutras, and more. Discover what survived, what was lost, and why it matters today.
Electoral Betrayal of 1946
A civilizational legal assessment of the events of 1946 and their constitutional implications.
NDV Policy Memo 02/2025 — IMCF Protocol
The Ideological Motive Coding Framework for national-security and constitutional systems.
Know Your DharmaShastras
A quick window into India’s ancient knowledge systems — Vedas, Shastras, Sutras, and more. Discover what survived, what was lost, and why it matters today.
- About us
Who We Are
NDV is a national legal-policy think tank dedicated to restoring Bharat’s civilizational, legal, and cultural sovereignty. We bring together Dharmic jurisprudence, constitutional values, and modern governance to ensure that Indian law reflects the enduring principles of Dharm, justice, and societal well-being.
- Books
Book Launch
The Ban on Cow Slaughter in India
Date / Venue: To Be Announced
Presentation of NDV’s landmark publication on the convergence of law, culture, and civilization.
Date / Venue: To Be Announced
The book traces the sacred status of the Gaumata from Vedic and ancient India, through medieval jurisprudence, up to post-independence India, analyzing how civilizational values have been reflected, challenged, and codified in legal systems over time.
- Initiatives
Dharmic Heritage Zones (DHZ)
A framework for restoring temple towns and sacred corridors as constitutionally protected, self-governing civilizational ecosystems. The DHZ Model Law empowers Local Dharmic Boards, safeguards ritual sanctity, ensures transparent funding, and prevents political interference.
- Public Right Response
मोअनं स्वीकृतिः लक्षणम् — Silence is Consent
Recently, the Karnataka High Court ruled that distributing religious pamphlets near a temple does not amount to an offence unless conversion actually takes place.
Must conversion happen first before dharm can be protected?
- Blog
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