
Indian Constitution β Detailed & Categorised SummaryΒ
The Constitution of India is the supreme law of the country, adopted on 26 November 1949 and effective from 26 January 1950. It establishes the framework of governance, defines powers, and guarantees rights.
π§ 1. Preamble (Introductory Philosophy)
The Preamble reflects the spirit of the Constitution:
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Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic, Republic
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Ensures:
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Justice (Social, Economic, Political)
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Liberty (Thought, Expression, Belief, Faith, Worship)
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Equality (Status & Opportunity)
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Fraternity (Unity & Integrity)
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π Important Case: Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala β Preamble is part of the Constitution.
ποΈ 2. Union & Its Territory (Articles 1β4)
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India = βUnion of Statesβ
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Parliament can:
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Form new states
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Alter boundaries/names
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π§ββοΈ 3. Citizenship (Articles 5β11)
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Citizenship at commencement
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Parliament empowered to regulate citizenship laws
π Relevant Law: Citizenship Act, 1955
βοΈ 4. Fundamental Rights (Articles 12β35)
Core of judicial exams β οΈ
Categories:
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Right to Equality (Art. 14β18)
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Right to Freedom (Art. 19β22)
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Right against Exploitation (Art. 23β24)
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Right to Freedom of Religion (Art. 25β28)
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Cultural & Educational Rights (Art. 29β30)
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Right to Constitutional Remedies (Art. 32)
π Key Cases:
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Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India β Expanded Article 21
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A.K. Gopalan v. State of Madras β Early interpretation of personal liberty
π 5. Directive Principles of State Policy (Articles 36β51)
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Non-justiciable but fundamental in governance
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Promote welfare state
Types:
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Socialist Principles
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Gandhian Principles
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Liberal-Intellectual Principles
π Conflict Case: Minerva Mills v. Union of India β Balance between FR & DPSP
π§ 6. Fundamental Duties (Article 51A)
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Added by 42nd Amendment
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Moral obligations of citizens
π’ 7. Union Executive (Articles 52β78)
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President (Head of State)
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Vice-President
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Prime Minister & Council of Ministers
π Real executive power lies with Council of Ministers
ποΈ 8. Parliament (Articles 79β122)
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Bicameral:
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Lok Sabha
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Rajya Sabha
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Law-making authority
βοΈ 9. Judiciary (Articles 124β147)
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Supreme Court of India
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Guardian of Constitution
Powers:
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Judicial Review
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Writ Jurisdiction (Art. 32)
π Important Doctrine: Basic Structure Doctrine
(From Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala)
π’ 10. State Government (Articles 153β237)
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Governor
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Chief Minister & State Legislature
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High Courts (Art. 214)
π 11. Centre-State Relations (Articles 245β263)
Types:
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Legislative
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Administrative
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Financial
π Important for federal structure questions
π¨ 12. Emergency Provisions (Articles 352β360)
Types:
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National Emergency (Art. 352)
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State Emergency / Presidentβs Rule (Art. 356)
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Financial Emergency (Art. 360)
π Key Case: S.R. Bommai v. Union of India
π³οΈ 13. Elections (Articles 324β329)
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Conducted by Election Commission of India
π 14. Amendment of Constitution (Article 368)
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Parliament can amend Constitution
π Limited by Basic Structure Doctrine
(Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala)
π 15. Schedules of the Constitution (12 Schedules)
Important for exams:
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7th Schedule β Union, State & Concurrent Lists
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8th Schedule β Languages
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9th Schedule β Laws immune from judicial review (subject to basic structure)
π§ Exam-Oriented Strategy (Judicial Services)
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π Focus heavily on Articles + Landmark Cases
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π Remember Article numbers with topics
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π Practice case law application-based questions
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π Use Bare Act reading as primary source
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π Revise frequently with short notes
π― Final Note
The Indian Constitution is the backbone of all legal subjects in judicial exams. Mastery over Fundamental Rights, DPSP, Judiciary, and landmark judgments is essential for scoring high in both Prelims and Mains.