Indian Constitution at 76: Ahead of Western Democracies

 

Syllabus: Indian Constitution — historical underpinnings, evolution, features, amendments, significant provisions and basic structure.

Indian Constitution Ahead of Its Time

  • India adopted universal adult franchise in 1950, even before the U.S. and Australia ended voting exclusions.
  • Addressed caste hierarchy from inception through Articles 15(2), 17 and 23, targeting discrimination, untouchability and bonded labour in both state and private spheres.
  • Institutionalised affirmative action for SCs/STs in 1950, far earlier than U.S. or South African frameworks.
  • Recognised that social power exists beyond the state in caste groups, communities and local hierarchies, requiring constitutional restraints.

India vs Western Constitutional Models

  • Western constitutions primarily restrict state power; India extended rights to shield citizens from societal oppression, particularly caste-based exclusion.
  • Western democracies initially lacked group-differentiated protections; India guaranteed minority cultural and educational rights under Articles 29–30.
  • Anti-discrimination provisions emerged in the West in the 1960s–70s, whereas India embedded them in Articles 14–17 from the outset.
  • India fused liberal rights with transformative reform, using Directive Principles, affirmative action and socio-economic restructuring.

Evolution Since 1950

  • Article 21 expanded into rights to privacy (Puttaswamy), environment (Subhash Kumar), education (Mohini Jain) and legal aid (Hussainara Khatoon).
  • Basic Structure Doctrine (1973) protected democracy, secularism, judicial review and federalism from arbitrary amendments.
  • Social justice progressed through Mandal reforms, 77th and 103rd Amendments, and debates on OBC sub-categorisation.
  • Rights expanded for minorities, persons with disabilities, transgender persons and privacy rights.
  • Federalism strengthened through GST Council jurisprudence, cooperative federalism and post-liberalisation reforms.

Contemporary Challenges

  • Persistent caste discrimination, manual scavenging and residential segregation.
  • Growing executive dominance risks weakening independent institutions.
  • Preventive detention laws retain wide coercive power.
  • Tensions between religious freedom and gender justice remain unresolved.
  • Digital surveillance and weak data protection threaten privacy.
  • Rising majoritarian narratives strain constitutional pluralism.

Way Ahead

  • Strengthen institutional autonomy with transparent appointments and fixed tenures.
  • Expand constitutional literacy across educational platforms.
  • Update privacy and digital governance laws aligned with Article 21.
  • Enact stronger anti-discrimination measures across sectors.
  • Promote participatory federalism and safeguard minority rights.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top