SC
SwaPrepSoul of Self‑Prep
Study MaterialPolityFundamental Rights
PolityStudy Material

Fundamental Rights

10 min read1,889 words0% read

Fundamental Rights

Subject: Polity | Unit: Fundamental Rights & Duties | Topic: Fundamental Rights Exam: AP Group 2 (APPSC) Prerequisites: Schedules and Articles, Constitutional Amendments


Introduction

Fundamental Rights are the cornerstone of Indian democracy, enshrined in Part III (Articles 12-35) of the Constitution. Inspired by the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution, they guarantee civil liberties to all citizens and, in some cases, to all persons within India's territory. They are justiciable, meaning they can be enforced through courts, making them the most powerful protection against State tyranny.


Historical Context / Constitutional Background

The demand for fundamental rights emerged during the freedom movement. The Indian National Congress's Karachi Resolution (1931) contained a declaration of fundamental rights. The Nehru Report (1928) also included a bill of rights. The framers studied the US Bill of Rights, the French Declaration of Rights, and the UN Declaration of Human Rights before crafting Part III. Originally there were 7 categories of rights; the Right to Property was removed by the 44th Amendment (1978) and made a constitutional right under Article 300A.


Core Content

Foundational Provisions

  • Article 12: Defines "State" broadly — includes Government, Parliament, State Legislatures, Local bodies, and other authorities
  • Article 13: Laws inconsistent with FR are void to the extent of inconsistency
  • FRs are not absolute — subject to reasonable restrictions
  • FRs can be suspended during National Emergency (Art 358, 359) — EXCEPT Articles 20 and 21
  • Parliament can restrict or abrogate FRs for Armed Forces (Art 33) and during Martial Law (Art 34)

The Six Fundamental Rights

1. Right to Equality (Articles 14-18)

ArticleProvisionDetails
14Equality before law AND equal protection of lawsTwo concepts: British "equality before law" + American "equal protection"
15Prohibition of discriminationOn grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth ONLY
15(4)Special provisions for backward classesAdded by 1st Amendment
15(5)OBC reservation in education93rd Amendment (2005) — 27% OBC reservation
15(6)EWS reservation103rd Amendment (2019) — 10% EWS reservation
16Equal opportunity in public employmentNo discrimination in government jobs
16(4A)Reservation in promotion for SC/ST77th Amendment (1995)
16(6)EWS reservation in employment103rd Amendment (2019)
17Abolition of UntouchabilityEnforceable against private individuals too
18Abolition of TitlesNo titles except military/academic

2. Right to Freedom (Articles 19-22)

ArticleProvisionDetails
19(1)(a)Freedom of speech and expressionRestrictions: sovereignty, security, public order, decency, morality, contempt, defamation, incitement
19(1)(b)Freedom of assemblyPeacefully, without arms
19(1)(c)Freedom of association/unionsCan form associations, cooperatives
19(1)(d)Freedom of movementThroughout India
19(1)(e)Freedom of residenceSettle in any part of India
19(1)(g)Freedom of profession/trade/businessSubject to professional qualifications
20Protection against conviction(a) No ex-post-facto laws, (b) No double jeopardy, (c) No self-incrimination
21Right to Life and Personal Liberty"No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law"
21ARight to EducationFree and compulsory education for ages 6-14; 86th Amendment (2002)
22Protection against arrest/detentionRight to be informed of grounds; right to lawyer; production before magistrate within 24 hours

Critical distinction: Article 19 freedoms available only to citizens; Articles 20, 21 available to all persons (citizens and non-citizens).

3. Right against Exploitation (Articles 23-24)

ArticleProvisionDetails
23Prohibition of traffic in human beings and forced labourIncludes begar, bonded labour, trafficking; enforceable against private persons
24Prohibition of child labourNo child below 14 years in factories, mines, or hazardous employment

4. Right to Freedom of Religion (Articles 25-28)

ArticleProvisionDetails
25Freedom of conscience; free profession, practice, propagationSubject to public order, morality, health
26Freedom to manage religious affairsEstablish institutions, manage affairs, own property
27No compulsory payment of taxes for religious promotionCannot tax for promoting any religion
28No religious instruction in State-funded institutionsExceptions: endowed institutions

5. Cultural and Educational Rights (Articles 29-30)

ArticleProvisionDetails
29Protection of minority interestsAny section with distinct language/script/culture can conserve it
30Right of minorities to establish educational institutionsBoth religious and linguistic minorities

6. Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32)

  • Article 32: Right to move Supreme Court for enforcement of FR
  • Dr. Ambedkar called it the "heart and soul" of the Constitution
  • Supreme Court is the "guarantor and guardian" of Fundamental Rights

Five Writs under Article 32

WritMeaningPurpose
Habeas Corpus"To have the body"Against unlawful detention
Mandamus"We command"Direct public official to perform duty; NOT against private person or President/Governor
Prohibition"To forbid"Higher court prevents lower court from exceeding jurisdiction
Certiorari"To be certified"Higher court quashes order of lower court beyond jurisdiction
Quo Warranto"By what authority"Challenge person holding public office without legal authority

Article 226 (High Court writs) is wider than Article 32 — HC can issue writs for FR AND for "any other purpose".

Landmark Cases

CaseYearSignificance
A.K. Gopalan v. State of Madras1950Narrow interpretation of Art 21
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India1978Expanded Art 21; procedure must be fair, just, reasonable
Vishakha v. State of Rajasthan1997Sexual harassment guidelines under Art 21
Kesavananda Bharati1973FR can be amended but Basic Structure cannot be destroyed
Indra Sawhney v. Union of India1992Mandal case; 50% ceiling on reservations; creamy layer
K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India2017Right to Privacy is fundamental right under Art 21

Rights that Cannot be Suspended During Emergency

  • Article 20: Protection against conviction
  • Article 21: Right to Life and Personal Liberty
  • These are absolute and inviolable even during National Emergency

Key Articles Table

ArticleSubjectKey Provision
Art 12Definition of StateIncludes govt, Parliament, legislatures, local bodies
Art 13Judicial review of lawsLaws violating FR are void
Art 14Equality before lawEqual protection of laws
Art 17Abolition of untouchabilityEnforceable vs private persons
Art 19Six freedomsOnly for citizens
Art 20Protection vs convictionCannot be suspended even during Emergency
Art 21Right to lifeFor all persons (citizens + non-citizens)
Art 21ARight to educationAges 6-14; 86th Amendment
Art 32Constitutional remediesHeart and soul; 5 writs
Art 33FR modification for armed forcesParliament can restrict FR

Andhra Pradesh Connection

  • AP has significant SC/ST/OBC population — reservation provisions under Articles 15, 16 directly relevant
  • APPSC exams frequently test article numbers versus provisions
  • Telugu medium students should know writ names in English — these are Latin terms used as-is
  • Article 371D provides special provisions for equitable opportunities in AP public employment and education

Key Points Summary

  1. Fundamental Rights: Part III, Articles 12-35
  2. Originally 7 categories; now 6 (Right to Property removed by 44th Amendment)
  3. FRs are justiciable — enforceable through courts
  4. Article 12 defines "State" broadly; Article 13 voids inconsistent laws
  5. Right to Equality: Articles 14-18
  6. Right to Freedom: Articles 19-22
  7. Right against Exploitation: Articles 23-24
  8. Right to Freedom of Religion: Articles 25-28
  9. Cultural and Educational Rights: Articles 29-30
  10. Right to Constitutional Remedies: Article 32 ("heart and soul")
  11. Article 19: Only for CITIZENS; Articles 20, 21: For ALL PERSONS
  12. Articles 20 and 21 cannot be suspended even during Emergency
  13. Article 226 (HC writs) is wider than Article 32 (SC writs)
  14. Maneka Gandhi (1978): Expanded Art 21 interpretation
  15. K.S. Puttaswamy (2017): Right to Privacy under Art 21
  16. Five writs: Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Prohibition, Certiorari, Quo Warranto
  17. 44th Amendment removed Right to Property; now Art 300A

Exam Strategy

Question PatternExpected FocusFrequency
"Article range for each right"14-18, 19-22, 23-24, 25-28, 29-30, 32Very High
"Heart and soul of Constitution"Article 32 (Ambedkar)Very High
"Cannot be suspended in Emergency"Articles 20 and 21Very High
"Available to all persons"Articles 20, 21 (not just citizens)High
"Wider writ jurisdiction"HC (Art 226) wider than SC (Art 32)High
"Maneka Gandhi case significance"Expanded Art 21High
"Right to Privacy case"K.S. Puttaswamy (2017)Medium
"50% reservation ceiling"Indra Sawhney (1992)High
"Match writ with purpose"Know all 5 writsVery High
"Right to Property removed by"44th Amendment; now Art 300AHigh

Key Terms Glossary

EnglishTeluguDefinition
Fundamental Rightsప్రాథమిక హక్కులుJusticiable rights guaranteed by Constitution
Right to Equalityసమానత్వ హక్కుArticles 14-18; equal treatment
Right to Freedomస్వేచ్ఛా హక్కుArticles 19-22; personal liberties
Right against Exploitationదోపిడీ నిరోధ హక్కుArticles 23-24; protection from forced labour
Right to Freedom of Religionమత స్వేచ్ఛ హక్కుArticles 25-28; religious liberty
Cultural and Educational Rightsసాంస్కృతిక, విద్యా హక్కులుArticles 29-30; minority protections
Right to Constitutional Remediesరాజ్యాంగ పరిహార హక్కుArticle 32; enforcement through SC
Writరిట్ / ఆదేశంCourt order for enforcement of rights
Habeas Corpusహేబియస్ కార్పస్Writ against unlawful detention
Mandamusమాండమస్Writ commanding duty performance
UntouchabilityఅంటరానితనంAbolished by Article 17
Reasonable Restrictionsసహేతుక నిబంధనలుLimitations on FRs allowed by Constitution
Justiciableన్యాయస్థానంలో అమలు చేయగలEnforceable through courts
Ex-post-facto lawపూర్వ ప్రభావ చట్టంLaw applied retroactively (prohibited by Art 20)
Double Jeopardyద్విదండనBeing punished twice for same offence (prohibited)

Ready to test yourself?

Practice MCQs for Fundamental Rights