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Showing posts from September, 2022

4. FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: 3 RIGHT TO FREEDOM

                            4. FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: 3 RIGHT TO                                                      FREEDOM                                                                         ARTICLE 19                                     RIGHT TO FREEDOM 1. Protection of Six Rights Article 19 guarantees to all citizens the six rights. These are: (i) Right to freedom of speech and expression. (ii) Right to assemble peaceably and without arms. (iii) Right to form associations or unions or co-operative societies .¹Oᵃ (...

3.FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: 2. RIGHT TO EQUALITY

     3.FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: 2. RIGHT TO EQUALITY Right to Equality Articles 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 of the constitution under part 3 and Articles 38, 39, 39 a, 41 and 46 under part 4 of the constitution. 1.  the idea of equality unlike other provisions of the Indian Constitution, say the Principle of Federalism or Trade and Commerce, is an idea that is not just a political principle, but also a moral principle. 2.  idea or principle of equality is something that we struggle with and fight with and try to establish in our own daily lives, whether it is our personal lives or our professional lives. 3. what the constitution says about equality in light not just of political debates in the parliament or state legislatures or in the courts, but also as material for you to consider in the application of equality in your daily lives, in fact only then can the real constitutionalism 4. we will be looking at caste, class and gender inequalities, which are the 3 primary faul...

2. FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS 1.SIGNIFICANCE, FEATURES, TYPES, LIMITATIONS AND THE STATE

                                                         Fundamental Rights FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS 1.SIGNIFICANCE, FEATURES, TYPES, LIMITATIONS AND THE STATE WHAT IS RIGHT (1)   First to have  arrived may mean the right to do something . For example, you might say I have the right to  speak, or the right to express myself. This kind of a right or right to do some is commonly  understood as a privilege, or a liberty. When I say I have the rights to speak, I often mean that  you do not have the right to stop me.  So this kind of right, the rights to do something is, is one rather large species of rights claims that  we commonly use in our everyday language.  (2) The second sense in which we might use a right is  to is to say that I have a right meaning that someone else has to do things for me. This...