FEATURES |
EXPLANATION |
Lengthiest Written Constitution |
- Originally (1949), the Constitution contained a Preamble, 395 Articles (divided into 22 Parts) and 8 Schedules.
- Factors Underlying Elephantine Size: Vastness of the country and its diversity, Historical factors, Single Constitution for both Centre and states, and Dominance of legal luminaries in the Constituent Assembly.
- Presently, it consists of a Preamble, about 470 articles, and 12 schedules.
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Drawn from various sources |
The Constitution of India has borrowed most of its provisions from the Constitutions of various other countries as well as from the Government of India Act of 1935. |
Federal System with Unitary Bias |
- The term Federation has nowhere been used in the Constitution.
- Article 1 provides for India as a Union of States.
- Federal Feature: Two governments, division of powers, written Constitution, bicameralism, supremacy of Constitution, etc.
- Unitary/Non-federal Features: Strong center, single constitution, single citizenship, integrated judiciary, all- India services, emergency provisions.
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Rigidity and Flexibility |
The Indian Constitution is neither rigid (like the USA) nor flexible (like Britain), but a blend of both. |
Parliamentary form of Government |
- The Indian Constitution has preferred the British Parliamentary System (Westminster model) of government over the American Presidential System of government, where Executives remain responsible to the Parliament.
- The Constitution establishes the Parliamentary system at the Centre and also in the States.
- Features: Presence of nominal and real executives; Rule of the majority party; Leadership of the Prime Minister or the Chief Minister; Membership of the ministers in the legislature; Dissolution of the lower house (Lok Sabha).
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Synthesis of Parliamentary Sovereignty and Judicial Supremacy |
- The sovereignty of Parliament is associated with the British Parliament.
- Judicial supremacy is associated with the American system.
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Integrated and Independent Judiciary |
- The Supreme Court stands at the top of the integrated judicial system in the country, followed by High courts in states and subordinate courts and other lower courts.
- Supreme Court: Highest court of appeal; Guarantor of the fundamental rights of the citizens; Guardian of the constitution.
- India: A single system of courts enforces both the central laws as well as the state laws. Provides for ‘procedure established by law’ (Article 21).
- USA: Federal laws are enforced by the federal judiciary and the state laws are enforced by the state judiciary. Provides for ‘due process of law’.
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Fundamental Rights |
Meant for promoting the ideals of political democracy. Part III of the Constitution guarantees six Fundamental Rights to all citizens:
- Right to Equality (Article 14-18)
- Right to Freedom (Article 19-22)
- Right against Exploitation (Article 23-24)
- Right to Freedom of Religion (Article 25-28)
- Cultural and Educational Rights (Article 29-30)
- Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32)
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Directive Principles of State Policy |
- It is mentioned in Part IV of the constitution.
- To promote the ideals of social and economic democracy.
- Non-justiciable in nature, i.e. they are non-enforceable by the courts for their violation.
- Classified Into Three (Not in Constitution): Socialistic, Gandhian, and Liberal-intellectual.
- Aim: To establish a ‘welfare state’ in India.
- Significance: Fundamental in the governance of the country, and it shall be the duty of the state to apply these principles in making laws.
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Fundamental Duties |
- Added to the Constitution (by 42nd Amendment Act) only after the recommendations of the Swaran Singh Committee.
- Part IV-A of the Constitution (only one Art 51-A) specifies the 11 Fundamental Duties.
- Non-justiciable in nature.
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Secular State |
- The term Secular was added to the Preamble by the 42nd CAA, 1976.
- Does not uphold any particular religion as the official religion of the Indian State.
- Western Concept of Secularism: Complete separation between the religion (the church) and the state (the politics).
- The Indian Concept of Secularism: Embodies the positive concept of Secularism, i.e. giving equal respect to all religions or protecting all religions equally.
- Articles Promoting Secularism: Preamble, Article 14, 15, 16, 25-30, 44.
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Universal Adult Franchise |
- The voting age was reduced to 18 years from 21 years in 1989 by 61st CAA, 1988.
- Universal Adult Franchise: Basis of elections to the Lok Sabha and the state legislative assemblies.
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Single Citizenship |
- India: Enjoy the same political and civil rights of citizenship all over the country.
- USA: Each person is not only a citizen of the USA, but also a citizen of the particular state to which he belongs.
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Independent Bodies |
Bulwarks of the Democratic System: Election Commission, Comptroller and Auditor General, Union Public Service Commission, State Public Service Commission. |
Emergency Provisions |
- Rationality Behind Provisions: To safeguard the sovereignty, unity, integrity and security of the country, the democratic political system and the Constitution.
- National Emergency (Art. 352)
- State Emergency or President’s Rule (Art. 356 and Art. 365)
- Financial Emergency (Art. 360)
- Unique Feature: During an emergency, the federal structure converts into a unitary one without a formal amendment of the Constitution.
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Three-tier Government |
- 73rd CAA, 1992: Constitutional recognition to Panchayats (Part IX,Schedule 11).
- 74th CAA, 1992: Constitutional recognition to Municipalities (Part IX-A, Schedule 12).
- Article 40: Organisation of village panchayats (Gandhian principle).
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Cooperative Societies |
- 97th CAA, 2011: Constitutional status and protection to co-operative societies.
- Fundamental Right: The right to form cooperative societies is a Fundamental Right (Art. 19).
- Added a new DPSP on the promotion of cooperative societies (Art. 43B).
- Added a new part IX-B entitled “Co-operative Societies” (Art. 243-ZH to 243-ZT).
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