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Kerala PSC Prep
Graduate Level intermediate Constitution Fundamental Rights Polity

Indian Constitution: Fundamental Rights (Articles 12-35)

Complete study notes on Fundamental Rights — all 6 categories, key articles, landmark amendments, and frequently asked PSC questions. Based on NCERT Class 9 Democratic Politics.

Published: 12 Apr 2026 Relevant for: Graduate Level Prelims, Graduate Level Main, LDC

Fundamental Rights are the cornerstone of the Indian Constitution and one of the most heavily tested topics in Kerala PSC exams. Expect 3-5 questions from this topic in any Graduate Level paper. These notes cover everything you need — based on NCERT Class 9 (Democratic Politics) and supplemented with PSC previous year question patterns.

Overview

Fundamental Rights are guaranteed under Part III (Articles 12-35) of the Indian Constitution. Originally there were 7 Fundamental Rights; after the 44th Amendment (1978) removed the Right to Property, there are now 6 Fundamental Rights.

PSC Favourite: “How many Fundamental Rights are there?” — The answer is 6 (not 7). Right to Property was removed by the 44th Amendment and made a legal right under Article 300A.

The 6 Fundamental Rights

1. Right to Equality (Articles 14-18)

ArticleProvision
Art. 14Equality before law and equal protection of laws
Art. 15Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth
Art. 16Equality of opportunity in public employment
Art. 17Abolition of untouchability
Art. 18Abolition of titles (except military and academic)

Key distinction (PSC trap): Article 14 has TWO concepts — “equality before law” (British origin, negative concept) and “equal protection of laws” (American origin, positive concept). They are NOT the same thing.

Article 15 exceptions: The State CAN make special provisions for:

  • Women and children (Art. 15(3))
  • Socially and educationally backward classes, SC/ST (Art. 15(4))
  • Economically weaker sections — added by 103rd Amendment, 2019 (Art. 15(6))

Article 17 is an absolute right — cannot be suspended even during Emergency.

2. Right to Freedom (Articles 19-22)

Article 19 guarantees 6 freedoms (originally 7; Right to Property removed):

  1. Freedom of speech and expression
  2. Freedom to assemble peacefully without arms
  3. Freedom to form associations or unions
  4. Freedom to move freely throughout India
  5. Freedom to reside and settle in any part of India
  6. Freedom to practise any profession, or carry on any occupation, trade, or business

PSC Favourite: “Article 19 freedoms are available to whom?” — Only to Indian citizens, NOT to foreigners. But Articles 14 and 21 apply to ALL persons (citizens + foreigners).

Article 19 restrictions: These freedoms are NOT absolute. The State can impose “reasonable restrictions” on grounds of:

  • Sovereignty and integrity of India
  • Security of the State
  • Friendly relations with foreign States
  • Public order, decency, morality
  • Contempt of court, defamation
  • Incitement to an offence

Note: Not all grounds apply to all 6 freedoms. “Friendly relations with foreign States” applies only to Art. 19(1)(a) — freedom of speech. PSC may test which restriction applies to which freedom.

Article 20 — Protection against conviction:

  • No ex post facto laws (retrospective criminal law)
  • No double jeopardy (punishment for same offence twice)
  • No self-incrimination (right against compelled testimony)

Article 21 — Right to Life and Personal Liberty: The most expanded article through Supreme Court interpretation. Now includes:

  • Right to live with dignity
  • Right to livelihood
  • Right to privacy (Puttaswamy case, 2017)
  • Right to education (added as Art. 21A by 86th Amendment, 2002)
  • Right to clean environment
  • Right to health
  • Right to shelter

Article 21A (Right to Education): Free and compulsory education for children aged 6-14 years. Added by the 86th Amendment (2002). Implemented through the Right to Education Act, 2009.

Article 22 — Protection against arrest and detention:

  • Right to be informed of grounds of arrest
  • Right to consult a lawyer
  • Must be produced before a magistrate within 24 hours
  • Exception: Preventive detention laws (can detain without trial for security reasons)

3. Right against Exploitation (Articles 23-24)

ArticleProvision
Art. 23Prohibition of traffic in human beings and forced labour (begar)
Art. 24Prohibition of employment of children below 14 years in factories, mines, and hazardous employment

PSC trap: Article 24 prohibits child labour below age 14 specifically in factories, mines, and hazardous employment — it does NOT ban all forms of child labour. The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Amendment Act 2016 raised the age to 18 for hazardous occupations, but the Constitutional text in Art. 24 still says 14.

4. Right to Freedom of Religion (Articles 25-28)

ArticleProvision
Art. 25Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice, and propagation of religion
Art. 26Freedom to manage religious affairs
Art. 27Freedom from taxation for promotion of any religion
Art. 28Freedom from religious instruction in State-funded institutions

Key point: India is a secular state — the State does not promote any religion, but it also does not prohibit religious practice.

5. Cultural and Educational Rights (Articles 29-30)

ArticleProvision
Art. 29Protection of interests of minorities (any section with distinct language, script, or culture)
Art. 30Right of minorities to establish and administer educational institutions

PSC distinction: Article 29 protects ALL minorities (linguistic, cultural). Article 30 specifically protects the right to run educational institutions.

6. Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32)

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar called Article 32 the “heart and soul of the Constitution” — this is the right to approach the Supreme Court directly for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.

The Supreme Court can issue 5 types of writs:

WritPurposeMemory aid
Habeas CorpusProduce the detained person before court”Have the body”
MandamusCommand a public official to perform duty”We command”
ProhibitionProhibit a lower court from exceeding jurisdictionStop doing
CertiorariTransfer a case from lower to higher courtSend up
Quo WarrantoQuestion the authority of a person holding public office”By what authority?”

Article 32 vs Article 226: Article 32 — writs from Supreme Court for Fundamental Rights ONLY. Article 226 — writs from High Court for Fundamental Rights AND legal rights (wider scope).

AmendmentYearChange
1st Amendment1951Added reasonable restrictions to Art. 19; added Art. 15(4) for reservation
24th Amendment1971Parliament can amend Fundamental Rights
42nd Amendment1976Added Fundamental Duties (Part IVA)
44th Amendment1978Removed Right to Property from Fundamental Rights
86th Amendment2002Added Right to Education (Art. 21A)
103rd Amendment201910% EWS reservation (Art. 15(6), 16(6))

Articles 33-35: Restrictions on Fundamental Rights

These articles are often overlooked but PSC does test them:

ArticleProvision
Art. 33Parliament can modify/restrict FRs for armed forces, police, and intelligence agencies
Art. 34Parliament can restrict FRs in areas where martial law is in force
Art. 35Parliament (not State legislatures) has the power to make laws for implementing certain FRs (e.g., Art. 16, 17, 23, 24)

PSC question: “Can Fundamental Rights be restricted for armed forces?” — Yes, under Article 33. Parliament can modify FRs for members of the armed forces, paramilitary forces, police, and intelligence agencies to ensure proper discharge of duties.

Suspension of Fundamental Rights

  • During National Emergency (Art. 352): Articles 19 freedoms are automatically suspended. Other FRs can be suspended by Presidential Order under Art. 359.
  • Exception: Articles 20 and 21 can NEVER be suspended, even during Emergency (after 44th Amendment).

Critical PSC point: After the 44th Amendment, Articles 20 and 21 cannot be suspended during any Emergency. Before 1978, all FRs could be suspended.

Frequently Asked PSC Questions on This Topic

  1. Which article is called the “heart and soul” of the Constitution? — Article 32 (B.R. Ambedkar)
  2. How many Fundamental Rights are there currently? — 6
  3. Which amendment removed Right to Property? — 44th Amendment (1978)
  4. Right to Education was added by which amendment? — 86th Amendment (2002)
  5. Which articles cannot be suspended during Emergency? — Articles 20 and 21
  6. Article 19 freedoms are available to whom? — Indian citizens only
  7. Which writ means “to have the body”? — Habeas Corpus
  8. Minimum age for child labour prohibition under Article 24? — 14 years
  9. Which article abolishes untouchability? — Article 17
  10. EWS reservation was introduced by which amendment? — 103rd Amendment (2019)

Notes based on NCERT Class 9 Democratic Politics Chapter 5 and Kerala PSC previous year question analysis. Updated April 2026.