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Hello. And welcome to your
course on Constitutional Law.
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This is week 1. And we will be focusing this week
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on introducing you to 2 key concepts and key
issues in the study of Constitutional Law.
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The concepts that we will look at are, what is a
Constitution? What is it that constitutions do?
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And what are the key features
of the Indian Constitution?
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Now, we all are familiar with the Constitution
itself. We have some passing familiarity,
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either from our civics courses in school,
or if we have had any exposure to political
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science or other social sciences, we have
some familiarity with the Constitution.
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But sometimes it is very easy
to forget the extent to which
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the Constitution regulates our daily lives. If
you were to pick up a newspaper on any given day,
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the front page is plastered with issues that
either relate to or are directly governed
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by the Constitution. Take for example, the
issues that are making the headlines today.
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One issue in the, on the front pages of every
newspaper today is about the Delhi Riots case,
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and how certain academics and political
activists have been implicated in that case.
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Or another issue that has the media
in a frenzy is the Sushant Singh
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Rajput death and the investigation surrounding it,
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where Rhea Chakraborty and others have been
arrested and other investigations are ongoing.
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Now, in both these cases, deal with Criminal
Law and all of criminal law is governed by
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the Constitution, because criminal law seeks
to regulate our liberties. What we can do?
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What we cannot do? What is what is allowed?
What is prohibited? How can the State enforce
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that prohibition? When can the State deprive of,
deprive us of our liberty in the enforcement of
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these prohibitions? These are key concerns of the
Constitution and all of criminal law and criminal
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process is therefore governed by principles of
the Constitution. Or take, for example, if you
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are talking about the Delhi riots, the Delhi riots
were in the background of the anti-CAA protests.
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And we saw earlier this year and late last
year earlier this year that the protests
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against the against the Citizenship Amendment
Act were in the name of the Constitution,
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that the idea that the CAA was violating the
Constitution, both in terms of its text and the
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core principles of the Constitution, and that it
was, it was a denial and a betrayal of what the
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Constitution stands for. And so that is something
that the Constitution does. The Constitution
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provides a site for protesting against the
Government of the day, whatever Government it is.
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We have seen protests against previous
Governments. We have seen protests against
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the actions of this Government, but it, but when
we protest against the actions of the State,
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we often protest in the name of the Constitution,
because the Constitution governs every action of
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the State. The Constitution is the supreme law
of the polity, and every action that the State
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takes and every law that the State passes, has
to comply with the Constitution. If it does not,
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then it is invalid. So, when we want to protest
against the actions of the State, or against a
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particular law, we often do so in the name of
the Constitution. This right to protest, this
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right to voice our opinion against the actions of
the State is also protected by the Constitution.
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So, the Constitution guarantees us liberty of
thought, expression, belief, faith and worship,
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the right to free speech and expression
and the right to assemble peaceably.
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And these are ways in which we organize
ourselves when we want to protest against the
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State. So, then what is it
that the Constitution is doing?
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The Constitution is the supreme law of the land,
there, and every other action, every other State
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action, every other law has to be in compliance
with the Constitution. And very importantly,
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the Constitution, it places a limit on what
the State can do. That is why we invoke the
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Constitution, when we want to protest against the
actions of the State. We say that the State, you,
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State, you cannot do something because the
Constitution prohibits you from doing it.
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Let us take another example. In, there has been
a lot of debate recently about the upcoming
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Parliamentary Session. One level of debate is
about whether Parliament should be convening at
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all, given the current pandemic. And of course,
there are other debates about the cancellation of
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the Question Hour and the
cancellation of Zero Hour.
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The Constitution has something to say on when
parliamentary sessions have to be held. In Article
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85, The Constitution says, the President shall
from time to time summon each house of Parliament
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to meet at such time and such place as he thinks
fit, but 6 months shall not intervene between its
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last sitting in one session and the date appointed
for its first sitting in the next session.
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So, you cannot have more than 6 months between
2 sessions of Parliament, between the ending
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of the first session, the prior session of
Parliament and the start of the next session of
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Parliament. There are no exceptions to this. That
means, that regardless of what the Government of
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the day wants, the regardless of the wishes
of the President or any other official,
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Parliament has to meet, Parliament has to convene
within 6 months. And that gets over in the coming
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week. That is why Parliament will convene in this
time. And this is the nature of Constitution.
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This tells us something about what Constitutions
do. Constitutions place limits on what the State
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can or cannot do. When the Constitution says, you
have to do something, the State has to do it. When
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the Constitution says, you cannot do something,
the State cannot do it. So, the Constitution is
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supreme law of the land. All other laws have
to be in compliance with the Constitution,
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all other State actions have to be in compliance
with the Constitution, and the Constitution
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places limits on what the State can or cannot
do, those limits have to be complied with.
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How do we enforce those limits? The
Constitution also creates institutions
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and structures to distribute power, in power of
the State and to provide checks and balances.
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So, for example, the Constitution
creates the Architecture of State,
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where there is an Executive, there is a
Legislature and there's the Judiciary.
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The actions of the of the
Executive are checked and balanced
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by the Legislature and the Judiciary. The actions
of Parliament are checked by the Judiciary. So,
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there is a system of checks and balances,
a system of distribution and separation
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of powers and of checks and balances, and this
is again something that the Constitution does,
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it organizes it creates the institutions of the
State and it distributes powers within the State.
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These keep, keep these concepts in mind. The idea
that the Constitution is supreme law of the land,
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and the idea that the Constitution places limits
on what the State can or cannot do. These are
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themes that will come up repeatedly in the course
of this week, as well as our future lectures.
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Now, let us let me take you briefly through
the thinking process behind the framing of
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India's Constitution. I am sure we all
know that the Constitution came into force
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on the 26th of January 1950, it is the day that
we celebrate as Republic Day for that reason.
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The framing of the Constitution
actually predates independence.
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The Constituent Assembly started the
task of framing India's Constitution
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in 1946. And in 1947, when India gained
independence, the Constituent Assembly
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took over as the provisional Parliament as well.
So, the Constituent Assembly started functioning
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both as the Constituent Assembly, as
well as the provisional Parliament.
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It took roughly 3, nearly 3 years, a little
bit shy of 3 years to frame the Constitution.
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And this 3-year period was marked
by intense public deliberation,
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both within the Constituent Assembly
and outside, on what the nature of
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this document should be like, this charter
for the future governance of the country,
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what should it be like, what should it
contain, what should it not contain.
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These are, this is an incredibly rich source of
modern and political philosophical deliberation
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about the nature of nature of the Indian
experiment. And if you are interested you should,
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on anything touching upon the Constitution, do
look up as your first point of entry, do look up
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the Constituent Assembly debates on that
particular issue, to see what was the
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thinking behind putting, behind the design of
the Constitution in the way it was designed.
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So, what were the key, what was the key idea and
understanding behind this Constitution? That is
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contained actually in the very first words of the
Constitution, the Preamble of the Constitution.
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The Preamble itself draws from one of
the first things that the Constituent
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Assembly got down to doing, which was
to draw up the Objectives Resolution
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for the Constituent Assembly. The Objectives
Resolution was defined the aims behind the
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framing of the Constitution and provided a
blueprint for the design of this Constitution.
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So, the Objectives Resolution set, and
the 8 points of the Objectives Resolution,
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I am just going to briefly highlight a few.
The Objectives Resolution proclaimed India
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as an Independent Sovereign Republic, and
the purpose of the Constituent Assembly was,
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the objective of the Constituent Assembly was to
draw up for future governance - a Constitution.
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This is very important. Proclaiming
India as a Sovereign Republic
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was important to break the tie from the colonial
past, that the Constituent Assembly drew its own,
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its powers from a Sovereign Republic as
opposed to from the British Parliament.
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This was very, this was an act of
breakage from the colonial past.
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And to buttress that, the Objectives Resolution
said that all power and authority of Sovereign
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Independent India, its constituent parts and
organs of government are derived from the people.
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What does that mean? Derived from the people means
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that all power in the Indian polity resides in
the people, it does not reside in a monarch,
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so it is not, India is not a monarchy, it does
not reside in a group of people, India is not
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an oligarchy, it is derived from the people,
India is being constituted into a democracy.
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And wherein shall be guaranteed and secured to
all people of India, justice, social, economic and
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political; equality of status of opportunity and
before the law; freedom of thought, expression,
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belief, faith, worship, vocation, association
and action, subject to law and public morality.
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These are the guarantees that structure
how the Constitution has been framed.
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And when adequate safeguards are provided
for minorities, backwards and tribal areas,
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and depressed and other Backward Classes. These
are some of the key ideas animating the design of
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the Indian Constitution. This is the framework;
this is the skeletal structure and the Constituent
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Assembly spent 3 years filling in that skeletal
structure and putting flesh on these bones.
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The Objectives Resolution then goes on to
shape the Preamble of the Indian Constitution,
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which says, We The People Of India, that we are
this, its we the people of India who are giving
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ourselves this Constitution. So, we are the
repository of the sovereign power of the State,
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all power in the, in India derives from
the people, it does not derive from the
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British Parliament, it does not derive from the
Constituent Assembly, it does not derive from God,
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it does not derive from any other source,
it is derived from the people of India.
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We The People Of India, having solemnly resolved
to constitute India into a Sovereign Democratic
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Republic and to secure to all its citizens:
Justice, social, economic and political;
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Liberty of thought, expression, belief, faith and
worship, equality of status and of opportunity;
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and to promote amongst them all Fraternity,
assuring the dignity of the individual
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and the unity of the nation; In Our Constituent
Assembly this 26 th day of November, 1949,
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do Hereby Adopt, Enact And Give To
Ourselves This Constitution. So,
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we, the people of India are giving
to ourselves, this Constitution.
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Now, if you're familiar with the text of the
Constitution, you might notice that there are some
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key words that are missing in
this particular framing of the
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Preamble. So, the current Preamble
reads. We the People of India,
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having solemnly resolved to constitute India into
a Sovereign Socialist Secular Democratic Republic.
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The word socialist and secular were
added by the 42nd amendment in 1976.
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Now, this was, these were amendments made during
the emergency. And there has been some recent
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controversy on whether the fact that the original
Constitution did not contain the word secular
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means that India was not constituted as a secular,
that the Indian Constitution is not secular.
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In fact, there was discussion on this in
the Constituent Assembly. It was very much
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the opposite. There was some discussion on
including the word secular in the Preamble.
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And the reason why that was rejected was because
the Constitution was so self-evidently secular,
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that there was no need to put the word in,
right at the beginning. The other phrase that is
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missing from here again, is a later addition, is
fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual.
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And the unity and integrity of the
nation is something that comes in later.
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Now liberty, equality, fraternity, of
course, derive their inspiration from
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the French Revolution, the 3 core ideas of liberal
liberalism that comes from the French Revolution.
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But the framers of the Constitution added
as the first ideal of this Constitution,
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justice, social, economic and
political. And why is that?
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If you remember from your history, lessons,
the freedom struggle was not only aimed at
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ending British rule. It was not just an
anti-colonial struggle. It was also a struggle for
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social justice. It was a struggle to remove social
inequities and inequalities in Indian society. And
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the Constitution framers thought that the Indian
Constitution should speak to and should address
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social injustice, social, questions
of social justice and social injustice
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in Indian society as well. And that is very-very
interesting because this is not something that
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Constitutions till that time
were supposed to be doing.
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Constitutions were supposed to create the charter
for the State and to create the framework for
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organizing the State, not a framework for
organizing society, or not a framework,
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not providing a vision for what society should
look like or for transforming society. The
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Indian Constitution made a break in that sense
from the Constitutions that had gone before,
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in saying that this Constitution should speak
not only to the organization of state, but also
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to the, to have a vision for the organization
of society and the organization of the economy
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in order to provide for social,
economic and political justice.
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And this is, this aspect
of the Indian Constitution,
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then comes to shape Constitutions that come
subsequently in other parts of the world. For
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example, the South African Constitution was
heavily inspired by this ideal of the Indian
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Constitution of having a vision for social
transformation embedded in the Constitution.
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In many constitutions in what is considered to
be the global south or the third world is, are
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that have come subsequent to the Indian
Constitution have borrowed this aspect of
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Social Transformative Constitution from the
Indian Constitution. So, justice, social,
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economic and political was very-very key
in the design of the Indian Constitution.
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In fact, Doctor Ambedkar, when he stood up to
present the final Constitution to the Constituent
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Assembly, he was of course the chairperson of
the drafting committee. And in that capacity,
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he rose to introduce the final Constitution and
for its adoption in the Constituent Assembly.
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And this is the, he makes this speech of
giving an overview to the Constitution
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and talking about his own impressions of
the Constitution and his worries about
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the future and his hopes and aspirations
for the future Indian State. And he says
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that on the 26th of January 1950, we are
going to enter into a life of contradictions.
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In politics, we will have equality and in social
and economic life, we will have inequality.
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So, in politics, we have recognized that 1
person holds 1 vote and 1 vote holds 1 value.
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We are all equal before the law. We are all equal
in terms of the political value that we have. All
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offices are open to us, all officers of State are
open to us. And all of us count as 1 and no 1 less
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than 1. But by reason of our economic and social
structure, our social and economic structure,
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which is based on inequality, social inequality,
and economic inequality, we shall continue to deny
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the principle of 1 man 1 value. How long shall we
live with this life of contradictions? He asks.
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How long shall we continue to deny equality in our
social and economic life? Because if we continue
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to deny it for long, we will do so only by putting
a political democracy in bedroom. So therefore,
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you cannot have us this system of contradictions,
where in theory, in a formal theoretical sense,
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you recognize the value of equality of all
human beings, but on, in reality on the
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ground, in your social structure, in your
economic structure, there is no equality.
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If you continue with a life of
inequality, this life of contradictions,
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those who suffer from inequality will blow up
the structure of liberal democracy on which
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the constant assembly had built up. And so, he
therefore says that therefore, this Constitution
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speaks to not only political inequality, but also
social and economic inequality. And therefore,
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the Constitution is designed not only to address
the political aspects of the Indian State, but
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also those social and economic life under the new
Constitution. And that is why justice in all these
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spheres social, political and economic are our
key design principles for the Indian Constitution.
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So, then what the Constituent Assembly goes on to
do is, it gives us the longest Constitution in the
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world, by far the longest Constitution in
the world. And the reason for the length
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of that Constitution was that
there was so much disagreement,
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one of the reasons was there was so
much disagreement on so many issues
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that the framers felt that they should address
and go into minutiae of various issues that
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many other constitutions do not place on in the
Constitution. They place. they regulate those
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aspects through statutory law. Now, what is the
consequence of placing it in the Constitution?
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Placing it in the Constitution means that no
other law can contradict that, those aspects
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of those laws. So, they one design choice that was
made by frames of the Constitution was to have a
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very expansive Constitution, where many matters
that other countries and other Constitutions
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have relegated to Parliament to decide were
actually put into the Constitution itself.
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So, with that, the Indian Constitution regulates
a whole range of issues that go on to govern us
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in our daily lives. So, it regulates citizenship,
it guarantees us fundamental rights, those include
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the right to equality, to fundamental freedoms, to
including the right to life, to right to personal
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liberty, guarantees in the criminal justice
process, our freedom of speech, expression,
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association, assembly, freedom of trade
and occupation, so on and so forth.
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The right against exploitation,
the rights of religious freedom,
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certain cultural and educational rights and the
right to constitutional remedies. It guarantees
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as an aspect of our fundamental rights, the right
directly to move the supreme court for enforcement
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of our fundamental rights. Then it has a chapter
on the Directive Principles of State Policy.
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The Directive Principles of State Policy are
guidance that the Constituent Assembly has
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given to the future State and says that these
are principles that you should be bound by
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in governing the future country, of governing
the future polity, these are the principles
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that should guide you in your economic policy,
in your social policy, in your political policy.
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So, for example, the idea that you should prevent
inequalities and the concentration of wealth
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in the hands of a few. You should ensure that
there are just in fair working conditions for
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all workers and that there is a fair living wage.
Then some that you might know, that are more
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controversial is that the Constituent Assembly
directed the State to have a Uniform civil Code to
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have, to make provisions for prohibition, to make
provisions for prohibition on cow slaughter. So,
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these are directions that have been provided by
the Constituent Assembly to the future State.
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And with the admonition that, that the State is
bound by these principles, but these principles
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are not judicially enforceable. So, one cannot
go to the courts and say that the State,
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the actions of the State are in contradiction
to the `Directive Principles of State Policy.
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But these principles are nonetheless
binding upon the State. It's just that
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they cannot be enforced before the judiciary.
The Constitution, through subsequent amendments
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also provides for fundamental duties. It creates
the of provides the architecture of the State. So,
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we have already discussed this, it separates
powers between the Executive, the Legislature
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and the Judiciary, and also between, creates
certain Fourth Branch Institutions, accountability
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institutions that provide another measure of
accountability and checks and balances upon
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the actions of other branches. So, the Election
Commission, the CAG are examples of Fourth Branch
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Accountability Institutions. It distributes
powers between the Centre and the States.
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It is a particular feature
of the Indian Constitution
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that this distribution of powers is
asymmetric, the Centre has more powers than the
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State. Through the 73rd and 74th Amendments,
the Constitution now also has distribution of
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federal powers to local Self-Government
Institutions, to Panchayats and Municipalities.
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The Constitution also provides for
special provisions for certain States,
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certain districts, certain areas, tribal areas,
autonomous areas, certain states. Article 374
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was an example of special provisions for Jammu
and Kashmir. But there are many-many other states,
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the North-Eastern states being example and
many-many other states that are governed by
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special provisions. Article 371A to A B C D
E, there are multiple provisions that govern,
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the that provide special provisions
for different States in the country.
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It also in terms of the Architecture of
the State, creates the administrative,
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the structure of the Administrative State, and
the Regulatory State provides for the services,
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the bureaucracy and the principles that would
apply to the bureaucracy, creates tribunals
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for resolution of some types of disputes,
provides for the freedom of trade and commerce,
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provides for elections, how elections are to be
conducted, qualifications and disqualifications of
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members provides protections for certain classes,
particularly scheduled caste, scheduled tribes,
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creates commissions in the National Commission
for Scheduled Castes, for Scheduled Tribes.
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Backward Classes commissions to protect
the interests of groups that have been
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historically marginalized, provides for the
languages of the of the union and the States,
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has certain emergency provisions and of course,
that, those are the provisions using which
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the Emergency of 1975 was imposed. And
then it provides for its own amendment,
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how can the Constitution be amended. And this
is something, this is an issue that we will
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take up in greater detail in subsequent lectures.
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So, let me conclude the session
by asking you a question.
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What then is the Constitution? If I were
to ask you, what is the Constitution? Can
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you identify what the Constitution is? What,
where would you look? I have taken you through
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broadly the table of contents
of the text of the Constitution.
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That is only one part of the Constitution. The
text of the, the document that the Constituent
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Assembly prepared is one part of
what comprises the Constitution.
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On top of that, are judicial decisions
that have interpreted the Constitution,
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there are a set of what are
called Constitutional Conventions.
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These are practices that have gained, that
because of repeated observance have gained
00:28:48
the sanctity of law. So, let me give you one
example. If there is a hung Parliament, and
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no party has, no one party has majority, who
should the President call to upon to form the
00:29:05
Government? There is nothing in the Constitution,
no tech, no specific express provision in the
00:29:14
Constitution, which guides the President on
what to do or what not to do in the situation.
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So, there are conventions that have developed
around this for under that, conventions are,
00:29:25
that it is either the single largest party
or the single largest coalition, depending on
00:29:32
various permutations and combinations. So,
these constitutional conventions because
00:29:38
of their, because of them being
followed for many-many years, with
00:29:45
the belief that, that the those who
are following this these principles
00:29:51
are also bound by them gain the
status of constitutional conventions.
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And there is an expectation that they will
be followed, courts use these principles
00:30:01
to decide whether there was a violation of the
Constitution or not. So, there is a written part
00:30:07
of the Constitution, there are these unwritten
parts of the Constitution, and then there is the
00:30:12
judicial decisions that again add another layer
of flesh, maybe a, probably a layer of fat
00:30:20
on top of the flesh, that is the constitutional
text. So, that is what the Constitution is.
00:30:27
We will stop the lecture here, and take up
the issues of what it is that Constitutions
00:30:35
do and how we should think about the
Constitution in the next lecture.