Right to Constitutional Remedies Article 32 Meaning, Writs, Importance & Dr. Ambedkar
π Meaning
β‘οΈ Constitutional Remedies = Legal ways to protect Fundamental Rights
β‘οΈ If your rights are violated, you can approach the courts directly
β‘οΈ This ensures that law protects every citizen, and justice is accessible
π What is Article 32?
β‘οΈ Grants the Right to Constitutional Remedies
β‘οΈ Empowers citizens to go directly to the Supreme Court for protection of Fundamental Rights
π§ββοΈ It is the mechanism that makes Fundamental Rights βrealβ and not just words on paper.
π‘ Why Important?
πΉ Protects individual liberty
πΉ Ensures rule of law
πΉ Makes judiciary the protector of rights
πΉ Strengthens democracy
π° Dr. Ambedkar called Article 32 the βheart and soul of the Constitutionβ
πΉ Without it, Fundamental Rights would be meaningless
π Key Provisions of Article 32
1οΈβ£ Direct Access to Supreme Court
β‘οΈ For enforcement of Fundamental Rights
2οΈβ£ Supreme Court can issue:
β‘οΈ Writs, Orders, or Directions
3οΈβ£ Parliament can empower other courts to issue writs
β But High Courts already have this power under Article 226
4οΈβ£ Cannot be suspended except during National Emergency (Article 359)
βοΈ Writ Jurisdiction
ποΈ Writs = Written orders by courts to protect rights
π Borrowed from UKβs Prerogative Writs
β
Issued by:
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Supreme Court under Article 32
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High Courts under Article 226
π Types of Writs (Ye last topic me detail me cover kiye hai maine )
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Habeas Corpus β βProduce the bodyβ (release unlawful detention)
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Mandamus β βWe commandβ (order to perform duty)
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Certiorari β βTo be certifiedβ (transfer case to higher court)
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Prohibition β Stop lower court from overstepping
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Quo-Warranto β βBy what authority?β (challenge illegal public post holding)
π‘οΈ Supreme Courtβs Role
β‘οΈ Acts as the defender and guarantor of Fundamental Rights
β‘οΈ Has original jurisdiction β citizens can directly approach the court
β‘οΈ Power is wide but not exclusive (High Courts also share this power)
ποΈ Basic Feature Doctrine
β
Supreme Court ruled:
β€ Article 32 is a Basic Feature of the Constitution
β€ It cannot be removed or limited, even by an amendment
π Articles 33, 34, and 35 β Special Provisions
π Article 33 β Power of Parliament
β‘οΈ Parliament can modify or restrict Fundamental Rights for:
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Armed forces
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Police
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Paramilitary forces
β‘οΈ To ensure discipline, national security, and integrity
π Article 34 β Martial Law Provisions
β‘οΈ Provides legal protection to actions taken during Martial Law
β‘οΈ Parliament can pass laws to indemnify officers who acted under martial law
π Article 35 β Parliament’s Power Only
β‘οΈ Only Parliament can make laws on:
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Enforcement of Fundamental Rights
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Prescribing punishment for rights violations
β‘οΈ Ensures uniformity across India