- (a). Republic, democratic, secular, socialist, sovereign
- (b). Sovereign, socialist, secular, republic, democratic
- (c). Sovereign, republic, secular, socialist, democratic
- (d). Sovereign, socialist, secular, democratic, republic
The Preamble of the Constitution reads: 'Sovereign Socialist Secular Democratic Republic.' Hence option (d) is correct.
(d)
- (a). Once
- (b). Twice
- (c). Thrice
- (d). Never
The Preamble was amended once (by the 42nd Amendment, 1976) to include the words 'socialist' and 'secular'.
(a)
- (a). Descent
- (b). Registration
- (c). Naturalisation
- (d). All of the above
Citizenship can be acquired by descent, registration and naturalisation as per the Citizenship Act; thus all listed methods apply.
(d)
- (a). Right to Equality
- (b). Right against Exploitation
- (c). Right to Property
- (d). Cultural and Educational Rights
Right to Property is no longer a Fundamental Right (it was removed by the 44th Amendment and is now a legal right under Article 300A). The others are Fundamental Rights.
(c)
- (a). Workers from Karnataka go to Kerala to work on the farms
- (b). Christian missions set up a chain of missionary schools
- (c). Men and Women government employees got the same salary.
- (d). Parents property is inherited by their children
Inheritance of parents' property is not an exercise of a Fundamental Right (Right to Property was removed as a Fundamental Right). The other examples illustrate freedom of movement, cultural/educational rights of minorities, and equality.
(d)
- (a). Right to freedom of religion
- (b). Right to equality
- (c). Right to Constitutional remedies
- (d). Right to property
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar described the Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32) as the 'heart and soul' of the Constitution because it safeguards all other Fundamental Rights.
(c)
- (a). If the Supreme Court so desires
- (b). If the Prime Minister orders to this effect
- (c). If the President orders it during the national emergency
- (d). All of the above
Fundamental Rights (their enforcement) can be suspended by a Presidential proclamation during a national emergency (Article 359). The President may suspend the right to move any court for enforcement of certain Fundamental Rights during such an emergency.
(c)
- (a). 1, 2 & 3
- (b). 1 & 2
- (c). 1 & 3
- (d). 2 & 3
Sarkaria Commission examined Centre-State relations; the Rajamannar Committee is also associated with recommendations on Centre-State issues; the M.N. Venkatachaliah (NCRWC) made recommendations including Centre-State relations. Hence all three contributed.
(a)
Using the page text and chapter context: Citizenship Act refers to the Citizenship Act, 1955; the Preamble was altered by the 42nd Amendment (so pair The Preamble → 42nd Amendment); 'The mini Constitution' in classroom exercises is associated with the Objective Resolution / early leadership role (Jawaharlal Nehru is the intended match in this exercise); Classical language → Tamil; National Emergency was first proclaimed in 1962 (Indo-China war).
1 → 1955; 2 → 42nd Amendment; 3 → Jawaharlal Nehru; 4 → Tamil; 5 → 1962.
The modern concept of a written constitution and constitutional government originated in England.
England
Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha served as the temporary President (chairman) of the Constituent Assembly at its first meeting; Dr. Rajendra Prasad was later elected President of the Assembly.
Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha
The Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution on 26 November 1949.
26 November 1949
Article 32 mentions five writs: habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari and quo warranto.
Five
Fundamental Duties were added by the 42nd Amendment (1976) and are listed in Article 51A of the Constitution.
Article 51A
Concise definition: it establishes the organs of government, distributes powers, limits authority, and secures fundamental rights and duties.
A Constitution is the supreme set of written or unwritten rules and principles that defines the structure, powers and duties of government institutions and guarantees rights and duties of citizens.
Concise definition: legal bond between an individual and the state that gives rights and imposes duties; Indian citizenship rules are governed by the Citizenship Act.
Citizenship is the legal status of membership of a state, conferring rights (e.g., voting, protection) and duties (e.g., obeying laws) within that state.
The Constitution guarantees: (1) Right to Equality (Arts. 14–18), (2) Right to Freedom (Art. 19 et seq.), (3) Right against Exploitation (Arts. 23–24), (4) Right to Freedom of Religion (Arts. 25–28), (5) Cultural and Educational Rights (Arts. 29–30), (6) Right to Constitutional Remedies (Art. 32).
Right to Equality; Right to Freedom; Right against Exploitation; Right to Freedom of Religion; Cultural and Educational Rights; Right to Constitutional Remedies.
In constitutional law, writs are remedies issued by superior courts (Supreme Court/High Courts) to enforce fundamental rights or correct inferior courts/authorities. Examples include habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari and quo warranto.
A writ is a formal written order issued by a court directing a person or authority to do or refrain from doing something.
The three heads are: (1) Legislative relations — distribution of legislative powers via Union, State and Concurrent Lists; (2) Administrative relations — control and co-ordination between Union and State executives (e.g., appointment of governors, administrative directions); (3) Financial relations — distribution of revenues, grants-in-aid, taxes and financial transfers between Centre and States.
Legislative relations; Administrative (executive) relations; Financial relations.
The Government of India has declared six languages as 'classical': Tamil, Sanskrit, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam and Odia (each recognized on different dates).
Tamil, Sanskrit, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Odia.
Definition: Proclamation by the President under Article 352 on grounds of war, external aggression or armed rebellion. Effects include centralisation of powers, possible suspension of certain Fundamental Rights and extension of Centre's authority over States. Parliamentary approval is required.
A national emergency is a proclamation by the President under Article 352 when the security of India or any part thereof is threatened by war, external aggression or armed rebellion. The proclamation must be approved by Parliament within one month and can be extended in six‑month periods.
Key points (concise exam-ready):
- Written and lengthiest: a comprehensive written constitution.
- Federal system with unitary bias: division of powers between Centre and States, with strong central features.
- Parliamentary form of government: Council of Ministers responsible to the Lok Sabha.
- Separation of powers: legislative, executive and judiciary (with some overlap).
- Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles: guarantees and policy guidelines.
- Independent judiciary and judicial review: Supreme Court as guardian of the Constitution.
- Secularism and democracy: no state religion; people’s rule.
- Universal adult franchise and single citizenship.
- Flexible yet rigid amendment procedure: can be amended by Parliament, some amendments require state concurrence.
Salient features: Written and detailed; longest written constitution; federal structure with unitary features; parliamentary democracy; separation of powers;Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles; independent judiciary with judicial review; secular state; universal adult franchise; single citizenship; amendment procedure.
List with brief notes:
- Right to Equality (14–18): equality before law, prohibition of discrimination.
- Right to Freedom (19–22): speech, assembly, movement, residence, profession.
- Right against Exploitation (23–24): prohibits trafficking and child labour.
- Right to Freedom of Religion (25–28): freedom of conscience and worship.
- Cultural and Educational Rights (29–30): protect interests of minorities to preserve culture and establish institutions.
- Right to Constitutional Remedies (32): right to move the Supreme Court for enforcement of rights.
Fundamental Rights: Right to Equality (Arts.14–18); Right to Freedom (Arts.19–22); Right against Exploitation (Arts.23–24); Right to Freedom of Religion (Arts.25–28); Cultural and Educational Rights (Arts.29–30); Right to Constitutional Remedies (Art.32).
Article 32 provides citizens the right to move the Supreme Court for enforcement of Fundamental Rights. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar called it the 'heart and soul' of the Constitution. Remedies include writs: habeas corpus (release from unlawful detention), mandamus (command to perform public duty), prohibition (stop inferior court from exceeding jurisdiction), certiorari (quash orders of inferior courts/tribunals), and quo warranto (challenge to public office holder's right). High Courts have similar powers under Article 226.
The Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32) allows enforcement of fundamental rights by appropriate legal remedies, including five writs. The Supreme Court (and High Courts under Article 226) can issue writs such as habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari and quo warranto.
Key differences: (1) Nature: Fundamental Rights are legal rights; Directive Principles are policy guidelines. (2) Enforceability: Fundamental Rights are justiciable (courts can enforce); Directive Principles are non-justiciable. (3) Binding: Fundamental Rights bind the State and sometimes citizens; Directive Principles are binding on the State to apply in governance but not enforceable in court. (4) Aim: Fundamental Rights protect individual freedoms; Directive Principles aim at social and economic welfare. (5) Origin: Rights are in Part III (Arts. 12–35); Directive Principles in Part IV (Arts. 36–51). (6) Remedies: Remedies available for violations of Fundamental Rights (Article 32); no comparable remedy for Directive Principles. (7) Amendment: Both can be amended by Parliament, but courts may examine conflicts (Fundamental Rights may prevail in case of conflict).
Fundamental Rights are justiciable, enforceable by courts, and primarily bind the State; Directive Principles are non-justiciable guidelines for the State to establish social and economic democracy.
Suggested steps:
1. Use reliable sources (Constituent Assembly records, government archives, NCERT/Samacheer text).
2. For each member note: full name, constituency/province, political affiliation, committee membership, major speeches or proposals.
3. Summarise contributions in a one-paragraph profile; assemble pictures and create a display or booklet.
4. Cite sources.
Note: Begin with prominent members: Dr. Rajendra Prasad (President), Dr. B.R. Ambedkar (Chairman, Drafting Committee), Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Maulana Azad, K.M. Munshi, Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar, and others.
Activity: Gather biographical details (name, province/state, party/group, role in Assembly), major contributions, and a photo for each member. Focus on key members like Dr. B.R. Ambedkar (Chairman, Drafting Committee), Dr. Rajendra Prasad (President of the Assembly), Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, and others.
Suggested steps for the project:
1. Find the official list of Drafting Committee members from reliable sources (Constituent Assembly debates, Parliament/Ministry of Home Affairs archives, National Archives of India or your textbook).
2. For each member obtain a photograph from an authoritative repository (National Archives, government websites, university archives) and note the citation.
3. Caption each photo with: Name — Role (e.g., Chairman) — One-line note of contribution.
4. Arrange the photos in a presentable format (poster/album/PowerPoint). Include a bibliography of sources.
Note: The textbook confirms the Chairman was Dr. B.R. Ambedkar. For the complete and authoritative membership list and photographs consult official Constituent Assembly records or the National Archives rather than an unverified internet source.
Student task guidance: Identify the Drafting Committee membership from authoritative sources (Constituent Assembly records/National Archives). Start with the Chairman Dr. B.R. Ambedkar. Collect clear, credited photographs for each member and caption each with name, official role and a one-line contribution. Cite the source for every image (archive, library, government website). Compile into a poster, album or slide presentation.
Short definition suitable for exams: supreme law outlining government structure, powers and citizens' rights.
A Constitution is the supreme law that defines the framework of government, allocation of powers, and the rights and duties of citizens.
Short exam-ready answer: legal membership of a state entitling a person to civil and political rights and subjecting them to state duties.
Citizenship is the legal status of belonging to a nation-state, granting rights and imposing duties on the individual.
Standard list taught in school Civics: Right to Equality (Arts. 14–18), Right to Freedom (Art. 19 and related protections), Right against Exploitation (Arts. 23–24), Right to Freedom of Religion (Arts. 25–28), Cultural and Educational Rights (Arts. 29–30), Right to Constitutional Remedies (Art. 32). (Note: Right to Property is no longer a Fundamental Right — it was removed and is now provided as a legal right under Article 300A.)
The six Fundamental Rights: (1) Right to Equality; (2) Right to Freedom; (3) Right against Exploitation; (4) Right to Freedom of Religion; (5) Cultural and Educational Rights; (6) Right to Constitutional Remedies.
Writs are legal instruments (e.g., habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari, quo warranto) issued by superior courts to enforce fundamental rights or control inferior bodies.
A writ is a formal court order directing action or inaction by a person or authority to enforce rights or correct jurisdictional errors.
See IV.5 — the three heads cover legislative distribution of powers, administrative coordination, and financial arrangements between Centre and States.
Legislative relations; Administrative relations; Financial relations.
These six languages have been officially recognized by the Government of India as classical languages based on antiquity, rich heritage, and independent tradition.
Tamil, Sanskrit, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Odia.
Concise: Presidential proclamation under Article 352 on grounds of war, external aggression or armed rebellion; leads to special powers to the Centre and possible suspension of certain Fundamental Rights; requires timely Parliamentary approval.
A national emergency is a proclamation by the President under Article 352 when the security of India or any part is threatened by war, external aggression or armed rebellion; it must be approved by Parliament and may be extended every six months.
Refer to the concise list and brief explanations given in V.1 for exam-ready details.
See V.1: Written and detailed; federal with unitary bias; parliamentary democracy; separation of powers; Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles; independent judiciary; secular, democratic state; universal adult franchise; amendment procedure.
See V.2 for a detailed list and brief descriptions of each group of Fundamental Rights.
Fundamental Rights are: Right to Equality (Arts.14–18); Right to Freedom (Arts.19–22); Right against Exploitation (Arts.23–24); Right to Freedom of Religion (Arts.25–28); Cultural and Educational Rights (Arts.29–30); Right to Constitutional Remedies (Art.32).
Article 32 gives citizens the right to approach the Supreme Court for enforcement of Fundamental Rights; High Courts have similar powers under Article 226. The five writs provide specific remedies: habeas corpus (for illegal detention), mandamus (to compel duty), prohibition (to stop excess jurisdiction), certiorari (to quash orders), and quo warranto (to challenge a person's right to hold office). It is a safeguard for fundamental rights and is considered fundamental to the Constitution's protective mechanism.
See V.3: Right to Constitutional Remedies allows enforcement of Fundamental Rights through the Supreme Court and High Courts via writs (habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari, quo warranto).
Differences summarized: justiciability (Fundamental Rights—yes; DPSP—no), binding nature (Fundamental Rights bind State; DPSP guide State policy), enforcement (courts enforce Fundamental Rights; DPSP are implemented via legislation/policy), aim (protect individual liberties vs. promote welfare), placement in Constitution (Part III vs. Part IV). In case of conflict, courts have evolved principles for reconciliation; Fundamental Rights typically have stronger protection.
Fundamental Rights are justiciable and enforceable in courts to protect individual liberties; Directive Principles are non-justiciable policy principles guiding the State to achieve social and economic welfare.
Follow the stepwise plan in VI.1. For a complete list of members, consult official Constituent Assembly records or government archives.
See VI.1: Collect biographical details, roles, contributions and photos of members; start with key figures (Dr. Rajendra Prasad, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Maulana Azad, K.M. Munshi).
Practical steps:
1. Verify the official list of Drafting Committee members from Constituent Assembly records (primary source) or an authoritative history text.
2. Locate photographs in reliable repositories (National Archives, government publications, university archives) and record citations.
3. For each photo provide name, role (e.g., Chairman) and a one-sentence note on contribution.
4. Present the collection (poster/album/slide deck) and include a source list.
Reminder: the textbook names Dr. B.R. Ambedkar as Chairman; confirm remaining members from the official records before collecting images.
See guidance: Start with Dr. B.R. Ambedkar (Chairman). Locate the official list of Drafting Committee members from Constituent Assembly records or National Archives; collect credited photographs with captions and sources; compile into a poster/album with bibliography.
Modern constitutionalism originated in England (Magna Carta, parliamentary traditions), which influenced later constitutions.
England
Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha served as the temporary chairman (temporary President) of the Constituent Assembly at its first meeting.
Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha
The Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution on 26 November 1949 (coming into effect on 26 January 1950).
26 November 1949
The five writs are habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari and quo warranto (Article 32).
Five
Fundamental Duties are specified in Article 51A of the Constitution (introduced by the 42nd Amendment).
Article 51A
- a. If the Supreme Court so desires
- b. If the Prime Minister orders to this effect
- c. If the President orders it during the national emergency
- d. All of the above
Fundamental Rights can be suspended by a Presidential proclamation during a national emergency (see Articles 352 and 359). The President may suspend the enforcement of specified rights for the duration of the emergency.
c
- a. American Constitution
- b. Canadian Constitution
- c. Russian Constitution
- d. Irish Constitution
Fundamental Duties in the Indian Constitution (Article 51A) were introduced by the 42nd Amendment (1976) and were inspired by the duties listed in the Constitution of the USSR (commonly referenced as the Russian/Soviet model).
c
- a. Article 352
- b. Article 356
- c. Article 360
- d. Article 368
Financial emergency is provided for under Article 360. The President may proclaim a financial emergency if the financial stability or credit of India or any part thereof is threatened.
c
- a. 1, 2 & 3
- b. 1 & 2
- c. 1 & 3
- d. 2 & 3
All three—Sarkaria Commission, Rajamannar Committee and the M.N. Venkatachaliah (NCRWC)—included recommendations relating to Centre‑State relations.
a
Duplicate of the matching exercise on page 253. Reconstructed pairs: Citizenship Act → 1955 (Citizenship Act, 1955); The Preamble → 42nd Amendment (Preamble amended by 42nd Amendment); The mini Constitution → Jawaharlal Nehru (textbook pairing with the Objective Resolution/leadership); Classical language → Tamil; National Emergency → 1962 (first proclaimed during 1962 conflict).
1 → 1955; 2 → 42nd Amendment; 3 → Jawaharlal Nehru; 4 → Tamil; 5 → 1962.