Constitution as a Living Document
"A constitution is not a parchment. It's a living, breathing document that grows with the nation." — Granville Austin
1. Chapter Overview
The Indian Constitution is the MOST-AMENDED national constitution in the world (100+ amendments). Is this a sign of WEAKNESS or of ADAPTABILITY? This chapter argues: ADAPTABILITY. India's Constitution is a LIVING DOCUMENT — it can be changed to meet new challenges while its BASIC STRUCTURE remains protected from destruction by the Supreme Court.
2. Why Amend a Constitution?
- Changing circumstances: New challenges arise (technology, environment, terrorism) that the framers couldn't foresee
- Correcting judicial interpretations: Sometimes amendments respond to court judgments that the legislature disagrees with
- Political evolution: New aspirations, new rights, new social goals
- Technical adjustments: Boundary changes, name changes, administrative restructuring
- A constitution that CAN'T be amended becomes a STRAITJACKET — and eventually people break out of it through revolution
3. The Amendment Procedure (Article 368)
Three Types of Amendments
| Type | Procedure | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Simple Majority | Passed like ordinary law (not under Art 368) | Changing state names, creating/abolishing Legislative Councils, citizenship provisions |
| Special Majority | Majority of total membership + 2/3 of members PRESENT AND VOTING in BOTH Houses | Most constitutional amendments |
| Special Majority + State Ratification | Special Majority + ratification by at least HALF of State Legislatures | Federal provisions: election of President, Union/State List changes, representation of states in Parliament, amendment procedure itself |
Why Is Ratification by States Required for SOME Amendments?
- To protect the FEDERAL BALANCE
- The Centre alone cannot change provisions that affect the States' powers and representation
4. Major Constitutional Amendments
| Amendment | Year | What It Did |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1951 | Reasonable restrictions on free speech; validated land reform laws |
| 24th | 1971 | Parliament CAN amend Fundamental Rights |
| 25th | 1971 | Curtailed property rights |
| 42nd | 1976 | 'Mini Constitution' — added 'Socialist', 'Secular', 'Integrity' to Preamble. Fundamental Duties. Weakened judicial review (partially reversed by 44th). |
| 44th | 1978 | Reversed many 42nd Amendment excesses. Restored judicial review. Right to property REMOVED from Fundamental Rights → legal right (Art 300A). |
| 52nd | 1985 | Anti-Defection Law (10th Schedule) |
| 61st | 1989 | Voting age 21 → 18 |
| 73rd & 74th | 1992 | Panchayati Raj & Municipalities |
| 86th | 2002 | Right to Education (Art 21A) — children aged 6-14 |
5. The Basic Structure Doctrine
Kesavananda Bharati v State of Kerala (1973)
- The QUESTION: Can Parliament amend any part of the Constitution — including Fundamental Rights?
- The ANSWER (by a 7-6 majority of a 13-judge bench): Parliament CAN amend — but CANNOT DESTROY the BASIC STRUCTURE of the Constitution
- What's in the 'basic structure'? The Supreme Court has identified (over subsequent judgments): supremacy of the Constitution, republican and democratic form of government, secularism, separation of powers, federalism, judicial review, fundamental rights (the essential core), rule of law, etc.
- This doctrine is the ULTIMATE LIMIT on Parliament's amending power
Significance
- Ensures the Constitution is FLEXIBLE (amendable) but INDESTRUCTIBLE (basic structure survives)
- The Supreme Court can strike down even CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS if they violate the basic structure
- Subsequent cases confirmed and applied this doctrine: Indira Gandhi v Raj Narain (1975), Minerva Mills (1980)
6. Exam Focus
- Amendment procedure — 3 types, what each requires
- State ratification — when needed and why (federal provisions)
- Major amendments — 1st, 42nd, 44th, 52nd, 61st, 73rd-74th, 86th
- Basic Structure Doctrine — Kesavananda Bharati, what it protects, significance
- Constitution as 'living document' — flexible vs rigid amendment
7. Conclusion
The Indian Constitution's GENIUS is its combination of rigidity and flexibility:
- AMENDABLE: 100+ amendments in 75+ years — adapting to change without breaking
- PROTECTED: The Basic Structure Doctrine ensures that amendments don't DESTROY the constitutional core
- LIVING: The Constitution breathes. It changes — but its HEART (sovereignty, democracy, secularism, rights, judicial review) stays the same.
A constitution that can't be amended is dead on arrival. A constitution whose basic structure can be destroyed is defenseless against tyranny. India's Constitution is neither dead nor defenseless.
