Land acquisition in India is governed by the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 (LARR), passed during the UPA-2 government.
The BJP government that came into power in 2014 promulgated an ordinance to revise the law.
Pending the passage of the amended bill, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had in July 2015 said state governments could pass their own land acquisition laws.
"One of the important consequences of the 2013 law... Is the new paradigm that has emerged and goes back to Article 254 (1) of the Constitution, which says if there is a state law and central law about a concurrent subject, then the latter will over-ride the former.
He made the comments during a panel discussion on an upcoming book by Michael Levien, Assistant Professor, Johns Hopkins University. The book is titled "Dispossession without Development: Land Acquisition in Neoliberal India".
The work is based on 13 months of systematic ethnographic research on large trends, with field work on a special economic zone in Rajasthan.
This could lead to a trend where states could have laws which accelerate land acquisition without necessarily ensuring full participation of the people from whom the land is being acquired, the Union former minister remarked.
The UPA-2 government passed the Land Acquisition Bill (The Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013). However, in December 2014 an Ordinance was promulgated to amend the Act.
The NDA Bill enabled the government to exempt five categories of projects from the requirements of social impact assessment, restrictions on acquisition of multi-cropped land and consent for private projects and public private partnerships (PPPs) projects.
Apart from the Congress, which wanted a return to the UPA's 2013 Act, parties like Left, SP, JDU, BSP, BJD were also opposed to the amendments.
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