Social Sciences, asked by Prakul2004, 10 months ago

what is the main aim of charter act?​

Answers

Answered by parth9367
2

The law of defamation protects individual reputation. The law assumes that all people are of good character until the opposite is proved.

People may believe that they have been 'defamed' if someone says or implies something negative about their character but whether this is defamatory depends on factors such as its context and to whom it was said. Each case depends on its facts. For example, it has been found to be defamatory to say in a particular context that a person is a homosexual, a communist or has scabbed on fellow unionists. Words and other matter (such as cartoons) can be defamatory by innuendo - that is, where the reader has to put two and two together to understand the defamatory meaning.

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Answered by Atulkumardubey08
2

Charter Act of 1833 was the outcome of Industrial Revolution in England which envisages that Indian's had to function as market for the English mass production on the basis of 'Laissez Faire'. Thus the Charter act of 1833 was institutionalised on basis of liberal concept

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