DIRECTIVE PRINCIPLES OF STATE POLICY IN
INDIA
An important feature
of the constitution is the Directive Principles of State Policy. Although the
Directive Principles are asserted to be "fundamental in the governance of
the country," they are not legally enforceable. Instead, they are
guidelines for creating a social order characterized by social, economic, and
political justice, liberty, equality, and fraternity as enunciated in the
constitution's preamble.
The Forty-second
Amendment, which came into force in January 1977, attempted to raise the status
of the Directive Principles by stating that no law implementing any of the
Directive Principles could be declared unconstitutional on the grounds that it
violated any of the Fundamental Rights. The amendment simultaneously stated
that laws prohibiting "antinational activities" or the formation of
"antinational associations" could not be invalidated because they
infringed on any of the Fundamental Rights. It added a new section to the constitution
on "Fundamental Duties" that enjoined citizens "to promote
harmony and the spirit of common brotherhood among all the people of India,
transcending religious, linguistic and regional or sectional diversities."
However, the amendment reflected a new emphasis in governing circles on order
and discipline to counteract what some leaders had come to perceive as the
excessively freewheeling style of Indian democracy. After the March 1977
general election ended the control of the Congress (Congress (R) from 1969)
over the executive and legislature for the first time since independence in
1947, the new Janata-dominated Parliament passed the Forty-third Amendment
(1977) and Forty-fourth Amendment (1978). These amendments revoked the
Forty-second Amendment's provision that Directive Principles take precedence
over Fundamental Rights and also curbed Parliament's power to legislate against
"antinational activities.”
The Directive
Principles of State DPSP are Policy (contained in part IV, articles 36 to 50,)
of the Indian Constitution. Many of the provisions correspond to the provisions
of the ICESCR. For instance, article 43 provides that the state shall endeavor
to secure, by suitable legislation or economic organization or in any other
way, to all workers, agricultural, industrial or otherwise, work, a living
wage, conditions of work ensuring a decent standard of life and full enjoyment
of leisure and social and cultural opportunities, and in particular the state
shall endeavor to promote cottage industries on an individual or cooperative
basis in rural areas. This corresponds more or less to articles 11 and 15 of
the ICESCR. However, some of the ICESCR rights, for instance, the right to
health (art. 12), have been interpreted by the Indian Supreme Court to form
part of the right to life under article 21 of the Constitution, thus making it
directly enforceable and justiciable. As a party to the ICESCR, the Indian
legislature has enacted laws giving effect to some of its treaty obligations
and these laws are in turn enforceable in and by the courts.
Article 37 of the Constitution declares that the
DPSP “shall not be enforceable by any court, but the principles therein laid
down are nevertheless fundamental in the governance of the country and it shall
be the duty of the state to apply these principles in making laws.” It is not a
mere coincidence that the apparent distinction that is drawn by scholars
between the ICCPR rights and ESC rights holds good for the distinction that is
drawn in the Indian context between fundamental rights and DPSP. Thus the bar
to justiciability of the DPSP is spelled out in some sense in the Constitution
itself.
It was said by several
members in the Constituent Assembly that the directive principles are
superfluous or mere guidelines or pious principles or instructions. They have
no binding force on the State. In his speech Dr. Ambedkar answered.
“ The directive
principles are like instruments of instructions which were issued to the
Governor in General and Governors of colonies and to those of India by the British
Government under the 1935 Act under the Draft Constitution. It is proposed to
issue such instructions to the president and governors. The text of these
instruments of the instructions shall be found in scheduled IV to the
Constitution of India. What are called directive principles is that they are
instructions to the Legislature and the Executive. Such a thing is, to my mind,
to be welcomed. Wherever there is grant or power in general terms for peace,
order and good government that it is necessary that it should be accompanied by
the instructions regulating its exercise.” It was never intended by Dr.
Ambedkar that the Directive Principles had no legal force but had moral effect
while educating members of the Government and the legislature, nor can it be
said that the answer referred to necessarily implied with the Directive
Principles had no legal force.
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