Dr. Ram Prasath Manohar IAS

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Dr. Ram

Study Materials

General Studies - Polity

Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSP)

DPSP

Basic Facts

  • Part IV of the Constitution
  • Articles 36–51
  • Aim: Establish a Welfare State & ensure Social + Economic Justice
  • Inspired by: Irish Constitution & Spanish Constitution
  • Non-justiciable, but fundamental in governance (Art. 37)
  • Described by Granville Austin as:
    “Constitutional instructions for achieving social, economic, and political justice.”

Articles 36 & 37

  • Article 36 – ‘State’ has the same meaning as in Article 12.
  • Article 37
    • DPSP is not enforceable by courts.
    • But binding on the State while making laws.

Classification of DPSP

  1. Socialist Principles

Article

Directive

38

Promote social, economic & political justice; reduce inequalities (44th AA)

39

Livelihood, distribution of wealth, prevent concentration, equal pay, child health & development (clause f added by 42nd AA)

39A

Free legal aid; equal justice (42nd AA)

41

Right to work, education & public assistance

42

Humane work conditions & maternity relief

43

Living wage, fair wages

43A

Workers’ participation in management (42nd AA)

46

Promote SC/ST & weaker sections’ education/economy

47

Raise nutrition, public health

  1. Gandhian Principles

Article

Directive

40

Village panchayats

43

Cottage industries

43B

Promote cooperative societies (97th AA)

46

Promote the interests of SC/STs (overlaps with socialist)

47

Prohibit intoxicating drinks/drugs

48

Prohibit cow slaughter & improve breeds

  1. Liberal–Intellectual Principles

Article

Directive

39

Gender equality (implicit)

44

Uniform Civil Code

45

Free education up to 14 years (modified by 86th AA → shifted to Art 21A)

48

Modern agriculture & animal husbandry

48A

Protect environment, forests & wildlife (42nd AA)

49

Protect monuments of national importance

50

Separation of judiciary & executive

51

Promote international peace, honour treaties, and arbitration

Directives Outside Part IV

Article

Directive

335 (Part XVI)

Claims of SC/ST in services while keeping efficiency

350A (Part XVII)

Primary education in the mother tongue for linguistic minorities

351 (Part XVII)

Promote the Hindi language

Conflict Between FR & DPSP

  1. Champakam Dorairajan Case (1951)
  • FR > DPSP
  • Led to 1st, 4th, 17th Amendments
  1. Golaknath Case (1967)
  • Parliament cannot amend FRs to implement DPSP.
  1. 24th Amendment
  • Restored Parliament’s power to amend FRs.
  1. 25th Amendment (Article 31C)
  • Laws implementing Art 39(b) & (c) are protected from violation of Arts 14, 19, 31.
  1. Kesavananda Bharati (1973)
  • Struck down the clause preventing judicial review.
  • Accepted protection for 39(b) & (c).
  1. 42nd Amendment (1976)
  • Extended Art. 31C protection to all DPSPs.
  1. Minerva Mills (1980)
  • Struck down the 42nd Amendment’s extension.
  • FR > DPSP (except 39(b), 39(c))
  • Emphasised Balance = Basic Structure.

Current Position

  • Fundamental Rights prevail over DPSPs,
    BUT Parliament may amend FRs to implement DPSPs without harming the Basic Structure.

Importance / Significance of DPSP

  • Embody Welfare State philosophy.
  • Provide socio-economic justice (real democracy).
  • Complement Fundamental Rights.
  • Guide the government in policymaking.
  • Many DPSPs converted into laws/rights:
    • MGNREGA, Legal Services Authority Act, Environment laws, Labour laws, Panchayati Raj, Bank nationalisation, Land reform acts, etc.
  • Political accountability: manifestos are often based on DPSPs.

Limitations

  • Non-justiciable (lacks legal force)
  • Not logically arranged
  • Sometimes outdated (Ivor Jennings’ criticism)
  • Conflicts with FR, centre–state disputes
  • Implementation depends on political will

 

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