Rupendra Tamang is serving as an Assistant Professor of Law at the Indian Institute of Legal Studies with expertise in Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Human Rights, International Law, and Law of Torts. He is a UGC-NET qualified academic currently pursuing his Ph.D. from the University of North Bengal. He has experience in teaching, legal research, academic coordination, and legal aid activities, and formerly served as a Protection Officer (Domestic Violence) under the Government of West Bengal, gaining practical exposure in gender justice and social welfare administration.
He has authored and co-authored several research publications on diverse socio-legal issues including LGBT rights, climate change, wildlife conservation, right to health, disability rights, cross-border human trafficking, and refugee women’s rights against domestic violence. His notable publications include works such as “Accepted But Not Accepted: The Stigmatization of LGBT People Post Navtej Singh Johar”, “Climate Change and Its Adverse Effects: A Concern of Human Kind”, and “The Siliguri–Nepal Corridor: Human Trafficking Dynamics and Survivor Recovery Initiatives.” He has also presented papers at various national and international seminars and conferences on constitutional rights, domestic violence, human rights, and trade mark law, while actively participating in academic workshops, webinars, and research methodology training programmes.
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