π Chapter 2: Rights in the Indian Constitution
1. Meaning and Importance of Rights
- Rights = Claims of individuals, recognized and protected by society & law.
- Rights become meaningful only when guaranteed by the Constitution.
- They protect individuals from the arbitrary actions of the state.
- In a democracy, rights ensure that citizens can express themselves, form associations, and live with dignity.
π Example cases:
- 1982 Asian Games case: Workers paid less than minimum wages β Supreme Court ruled it as forced labour.
- Machal Lalung case: Man imprisoned for 54 years without trial β violation of Right to Life.
2. Bill of Rights
- A Bill of Rights is a list of basic rights of citizens, guaranteed by the Constitution.
- In India β known as Fundamental Rights (Part III, Articles 12β35).
- Enforceable in court β Judiciary can protect citizens if rights are violated.
3. Fundamental Rights β Detailed
(a) Right to Equality (Articles 14β18)
- Equality before law and equal protection of laws.
- No discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth.
- Equality of opportunity in public employment.
- Abolition of untouchability (Art. 17).
- Abolition of titles (except military/academic).
(b) Right to Freedom (Articles 19β22)
- Article 19: 6 freedoms β
- Speech and expression
- Assembly peacefully
- Association/Union
- Movement within India
- Residence in any part of India
- Profession, occupation, trade, business
- Article 20: Protection in respect of conviction (no double punishment, no retrospective punishment).
- Article 21: Right to life and personal liberty.
- Expanded meaning by SC: clean environment, education, legal aid, speedy trial.
- Article 22: Protection against arbitrary arrest & preventive detention (max 3 months without Advisory Boardβs approval).
(c) Right against Exploitation (Articles 23β24)
- Prohibition of human trafficking & forced labour (begar).
- Prohibition of employment of children below 14 years in hazardous industries.
(d) Right to Freedom of Religion (Articles 25β28)
- Freedom of conscience, practice, propagate any religion.
- Right to manage religious affairs.
- Freedom from compulsory religious instruction in state schools.
- Secular state: No official religion.
(e) Cultural and Educational Rights (Articles 29β30)
- Right of minorities to conserve language, script, culture.
- Right to establish and administer educational institutions.
(f) Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32)
- Citizens can approach the Supreme Court or High Courts to enforce rights.
- Courts can issue Writs:
- Habeas Corpus β produce person before court.
- Mandamus β order govt. to perform duty.
- Prohibition β forbid lower court from acting beyond power.
- Certiorari β transfer a case to higher court.
- Quo Warranto β question authority of a person holding office.
π Called the βheart and soul of the Constitutionβ (Dr. Ambedkar).
4. Directive Principles vs Fundamental Rights
- DPSP (Part IV): Guidelines for state β social & economic democracy.
- Not enforceable by courts, but aim to build welfare state.
- Fundamental Rights: Justiciable & enforceable in courts.
π Conflict Example:
- Right to Property (originally a Fundamental Right).
- To implement land reforms, it was moved to legal right (Art. 300A) by 44th Amendment (1978).
5. Landmark Case: Kesavananda Bharati vs State of Kerala (1973)
- Supreme Court ruled: Parliament can amend the Constitution, but cannot alter the βbasic structureβ (democracy, secularism, rule of law, judicial review).
- Ensured Fundamental Rights & core principles remain protected.
6. Significance of Fundamental Rights
- Protect human dignity.
- Safeguard against dictatorship or arbitrary rule.
- Promote equality & secularism.
- Strengthen democracy.
π Summary Points
- 6 Fundamental Rights: Equality, Freedom, Against Exploitation, Religion, Cultural & Educational, Constitutional Remedies.
- Bill of Rights = Heart of democracy.
- Judiciary = protector of rights.
- DPSPs guide governance but are non-justiciable.
- Basic Structure doctrine prevents destruction of core values.
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