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Upsc Cse mains question
How to write this essay ?
The editorial shared above - is the answer for this particular essay
Why reading newspaper is important for prelims, mains and interview?
Source - The hindu + Business line + Indian express + Business standard+ Other papers + pib
Read,
Books
Newspaper
PYQ
Important article for the day- Tourism ( 29th Jan - Editorial written by Mr.Shashi Tharoor
Economic survey
We will have βEconomic surveyβ and βBudgetβ classes soon under Xinsheng complete prelims guidance program in Minds Of Aspirants!
Contact information -
Link for our youtube channel - https://youtube.com/channel/UCZnY9iGy0G1zCwQFlqrFhlQ
7305605638
@moa_official
What is E-governance ? Explain with examples.
PRAGATI
Excellent article explaining what is PRAGATI!
Comparison: Shankari Prasad (1951) vs Sajjan Singh (1965)
(Constitutional Amendment & Fundamental Rights)
βββββββββββββββββββββββ
πΉ 1. Context
β’ Shankari Prasad (1951):
Challenge to 1st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1951
β’ Sajjan Singh (1965):
Challenge to 17th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1964
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πΉ 2. Primary Issue
β’ Shankari Prasad:
Can Parliament amend Fundamental Rights?
β’ Sajjan Singh:
Can Parliament amend Fundamental Rights without any limitation?
βββββββββββββββββββββββ
πΉ 3. Amendments Involved
β’ Shankari Prasad:
Articles 31A, 31B and Ninth Schedule
β’ Sajjan Singh:
Expansion of Ninth Schedule
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πΉ 4. Bench Strength
β’ Shankari Prasad: 5 judges
β’ Sajjan Singh: 5 judges
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πΉ 5. Verdict
β’ Shankari Prasad: Unanimous
β’ Sajjan Singh: Majority (3:2)
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πΉ 6. Core Holding
β’ Both cases held:
Parliament can amend Fundamental Rights under Article 368
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πΉ 7. Interpretation of Article 13(2)
β’ Shankari Prasad:
Constitutional amendment is not βlawβ under Article 13(2)
β’ Sajjan Singh:
Reaffirmed that amendment β βlawβ
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πΉ 8. Nature of Amending Power
β’ Both cases:
Amendment is an exercise of constituent power, not ordinary legislative power
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πΉ 9. View on Limitations
β’ Shankari Prasad:
No discussion on limits to amending power
β’ Sajjan Singh:
Implied limitations questioned (in dissent)
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πΉ 10. Judicial Attitude
β’ Shankari Prasad:
Clear Parliamentary supremacy
β’ Sajjan Singh:
Parliamentary supremacy, but judicial unease visible
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πΉ 11. Dissent
β’ Shankari Prasad: β None
β’ Sajjan Singh: β
Justice J.R. Mudholkar
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πΉ 12. Basic Structure Idea
β’ Shankari Prasad: β Absent
β’ Sajjan Singh: β
First hinted (in dissent)
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πΉ 13. Historical Role
β’ Shankari Prasad:
Established Parliamentβs power to amend FRs
β’ Sajjan Singh:
Questioned the idea of absolute amending power
βββββββββββββββββββββββ
πΉ 14. Later Fate
β’ Both cases:
Overruled in Golaknath v. State of Punjab (1967)
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Important Constitutional Cases
Case 2
Sajjan Singh v. State of Rajasthan (1965)
Background
β’ 17th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1964
β’ Added more land reform laws to the Ninth Schedule
β’ Objective: protect agrarian reforms from challenges under Articles 14, 19, 31
β’ Petitioners argued:
Parliament cannot amend Fundamental Rights, and such power would destroy constitutional supremacy
βΈ»
Issues Involved
1. Can Parliament amend Fundamental Rights under Article 368?
2. Is there any implied limitation on Parliamentβs amending power?
βΈ»
Judgment
Majority: 3β2
The Supreme Court upheld the 17th Amendment.
βΈ»
Key Holdings
β’ Parliament can amend Fundamental Rights
β’ Article 368 grants wide constituent power
β’ No distinction between Fundamental Rights and other constitutional provisions
βΈ»
Reasoning
β’ The term βamendmentβ in Article 368 includes all parts of the Constitution
β’ Fundamental Rights are not immutable
β’ Any limitation must be explicit, not implied
βΈ»
Significance
β’ Reaffirmed Shankari Prasad
β’ Continued Parliamentary supremacy
β’ Strengthened land reform measures
βΈ»
Important Dissent
β’ Justice J.R. Mudholkar questioned:
Can Parliament alter the basic features of the Constitution?
β’ Introduced the idea of βBasic Structureβ (not accepted then)
βΈ»
Later Developments
β’ Followed Shankari Prasad
β’ Overruled in Golaknath (1967)
β’ Dissent evolved into Basic Structure doctrine in Kesavananda Bharati (1973)
Important Constitutional cases
Case 1
Shankari Prasad v. Union of India (1951)
Background
β’ The First Constitutional Amendment Act, 1951:
β’ Curtailed Right to Property (Article 31)
β’ Inserted Articles 31A and 31B
β’ Introduced the Ninth Schedule to protect land reform laws from judicial review
β’ Petitioners argued:
Parliament cannot amend Fundamental Rights because Article 13(2) prohibits laws that take away Fundamental Rights.
βΈ»
Issues Involved
1. Does βlawβ in Article 13(2) include a constitutional amendment?
2. Can Parliament amend Fundamental Rights under Article 368?
βΈ»
Judgment (Unanimous, 5-judge bench)
The Supreme Court upheld the First Amendment.
βΈ»
Key Holdings
β’ Constitutional Amendment β βlawβ under Article 13(2)
β’ Article 13 applies to ordinary laws, not constitutional amendments
β’ Parliament has the power to amend Fundamental Rights under Article 368
βΈ»
Reasoning
β’ A constitutional amendment is an exercise of constituent power, not legislative power
β’ Article 368 is a self-contained provision for amendment
β’ If framers wanted to limit amendments, they would have said so explicitly
βΈ»
Significance
β’ Established Parliamentary supremacy in constitutional amendments
β’ Enabled land reform and socio-economic legislation
β’ Laid foundation for future constitutional conflicts
βΈ»
Later Developments
β’ Upheld in Sajjan Singh (1965)
β’ Overruled in Golaknath (1967)
β’ Partially restored (with limits) in Kesavananda Bharati (1973) via Basic Structure doctrine
Battery manufacturing
Advanced chemistry cell production linked incentive scheme
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