Vol. 11, Issue 4, Part B (2025)
Practice of the issue of preemption with reference to the discrete laws and judicial pronouncements in Bangladesh: A critical study
Practice of the issue of preemption with reference to the discrete laws and judicial pronouncements in Bangladesh: A critical study
Author(s)
MD Abdul Mannan Bhuyean
Abstract
This study is concerned with the practice of the issue of preemption with reference to the discrete laws and judicial pronouncements in Bangladesh which is planned to standardize the transactions of immovable property by admitting the particular rights to co-sharers and contiguous landowners. There are four (4) types of enactments are now applied in Bangladesh, viz., 1. The Partition Act, 1893, 2. The State Acquisition and Tenancy Act (SAT Act), 3. The Non-Agricultural Tenancy Act (NAT Act), 4. Muslim laws where the goal of those laws is to thwart land disintegration and preserve shared steadiness. Nonetheless, their solicitation over and over again steers to jurisdictive deferrals, pecuniary limitations, and prospective mistreatment. This article judgmentally scans the legal outline, together with the Partition Act, SAT Act, NAT Act, Muslim laws of preemption, topical modifications, and judicial announcements, to gauge the efficacy and tests of these laws in the present-day of Bangladesh.
How to cite this article:
MD Abdul Mannan Bhuyean. Practice of the issue of preemption with reference to the discrete laws and judicial pronouncements in Bangladesh: A critical study. Int J Appl Res 2025;11(4):88-91. DOI:
10.22271/allresearch.2025.v11.i4b.12455