Yug Raman Srivastava is an undergraduate law scholar at Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law (RGNUL), Punjab, India, currently pursuing a B.A. LL.B. (Hons.) with outstanding academic performance (CGPA 9.0/10 in the second semester). His academic interests lie at the intersection of constitutional law, public policy, technology regulation, air and space law, and emerging digital governance frameworks. Despite being at an early stage of his legal education, he has already developed a substantial research and professional portfolio with national and international reach.
Mr. Srivastava has completed multiple judicial, legislative, corporate, and policy-oriented internships. His judicial internships at the Patna High Court under two Hon’ble Judges involved research on bail jurisprudence, writ jurisdiction, compassionate appointments, and constitutional equality under Articles 14 and 16. These experiences refined his skills in judicial reasoning, precedent analysis, and procedural law. In parallel, he has worked on technology and regulatory issues during his internship at SB Tech Associates, where he researched AI regulation, crypto-assets, and intermediary liability under India’s IT Act.
His exposure to governance and policymaking includes serving as a Policy Research Intern in the office of a Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha), where he contributed to legislative research, briefing notes, and public outreach. He also gained international commercial exposure as a Private Equity Intern in Washington, supporting due diligence, investment research, and transaction documentation.
In addition to internships, Mr. Srivastava has acted as a Research Assistant in specialized fields, including space law and medical ethics, contributing to interdisciplinary research on commercialization, sovereignty, bioethics, and informed consent. His scholarly output includes numerous peer-reviewed and forthcoming publications in reputed journals, covering topics such as fintech regulation, aviation law reform, space militarization, and constitutional taxation frameworks.
He is an active participant in academic discourse, with paper presentations at international conferences across India, Australia, Sri Lanka, Japan, and the United States. His research has informed policy submissions to national authorities and international bodies, including the United Nations. Recognized through competitive awards, moots, and global fellowships, Mr. Srivastava also maintains active memberships in academic centers, editorial bodies, and international research initiatives. He represents a highly research-oriented, policy-conscious legal scholar with a clear trajectory toward advanced legal research, global governance, and interdisciplinary legal innovation.