Know Your Rights, Protect Your Future: A Complete Legal Survival Guide for Indian College Students Under New Criminal Laws (2024)

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DPID: 632

Abstract

India’s transition to the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), and Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) in July 2024 marks the most significant criminal law reform in more than 150 years. Yet, over 40 million college students across 45,000 institutions remain poorly informed about their legal rights and responsibilities. Official reports from the National Crime Records Bureau, University Grants Commission, and National Commission for Women confirm concerning trends: a sharp rise in student-targeted cybercrime, financial fraud, harassment, and exploitation. Despite this, most legal awareness programs remain fragmented and ineffective, leaving students without basic knowledge of applicable laws. This study develops a comprehensive legal literacy ready reckoner specifically designed for Indian college students. Unlike conventional awareness campaigns, the framework integrates: 1. Shakti (Legal Knowledge): clear summaries of key provisions under BNS, BNSS, BSA, and allied laws most relevant to student life. 2. Yukti (Practical Application): step-by-step action strategies for emergencies such as cyber fraud, harassment, tenancy disputes, and financial scams. 3. Mukti (Ethical Foundation): culturally grounded narratives that connect traditional Indian wisdom with modern justice, improving retention and relevance. The novelty of this ready reckoner lies in its triadic framework, practical orientation, and cultural alignment. It transforms legal literacy from abstract memorization into a usable student survival guide. Based on secondary analysis of official statistics, published research, and institutional reports, the study also presents expected projections. Widespread use of this framework could significantly increase legal awareness, improve reporting behavior, and reduce student vulnerability to exploitation. The ready reckoner is intended not only for students but also for police, educators, and policymakers. It provides a structured model that can be embedded into orientation programs, campus safety initiatives, and national education policy. By connecting India’s new criminal laws (2024) with practical and culturally relevant guidance, this framework addresses an urgent gap and offers a scalable, evidence-based solution for student empowerment and crime prevention.