TNPSC Indian Constitution Articles Complete Notes (1–51A) – Part 1 | இந்திய அரசியலமைப்புச் சட்டம் (1–51A) – TNPSC குறிப்புகள் | பகுதி 1
📜 Complete Study Notes: Articles of the Indian Constitution
Exam Relevance: TNPSC Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 2A | Group 4 | VAO — 3 to 8 questions appear directly from Constitutional Articles in every exam.
1. Introduction
The Constitution of India is the supreme law of the land. It came into force on 26th January 1950. The Constitution originally had 395 Articles, 8 Schedules, and 22 Parts. As of today, the Constitution has 448 Articles, 12 Schedules, and 25 Parts after various amendments.
For TNPSC aspirants, understanding the Articles of the Constitution is one of the highest-scoring areas in the General Studies Paper II (Polity) section. Questions appear in both direct and indirect forms — either asking "Which article deals with X?" or presenting a scenario and asking which article applies.
📌 Key Fact: The Indian Constitution is the longest written constitution in the world. It borrowed features from multiple constitutions — the USA, UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia, Germany, USSR, South Africa, and Japan.
2. Structure of the Indian Constitution — Quick Overview
| Feature | Original (1950) | Present |
|---|---|---|
| Parts | 22 | 25 |
| Articles | 395 | 448 (approx.) |
| Schedules | 8 | 12 |
| Amendments | — | 106 (as of 2024) |
3. Parts of the Constitution and Their Articles
| Part | Articles | Subject |
|---|---|---|
| Part I | 1–4 | The Union and its Territory |
| Part II | 5–11 | Citizenship |
| Part III | 12–35 | Fundamental Rights |
| Part IV | 36–51 | Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSP) |
| Part IV-A | 51-A | Fundamental Duties |
| Part V | 52–151 | The Union Government |
| Part VI | 152–237 | The State Governments |
| Part VIII | 239–242 | Union Territories |
| Part IX | 243–243O | Panchayats (73rd Amendment) |
| Part IX-A | 243P–243ZG | Municipalities (74th Amendment) |
| Part XI | 245–263 | Centre-State Relations |
| Part XIV | 308–323 | Services under the Union and States |
| Part XVIII | 352–360 | Emergency Provisions |
| Part XX | 368 | Amendment of the Constitution |
| Part XXI | 369–392 | Temporary, Transitional, Special Provisions |
4. Part I — The Union and its Territory (Articles 1–4)
Article 1 — Name and Territory of the Union
Article 1 declares: "India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States." The word "Union" was deliberately used instead of "Federation" because the Indian federation is indestructible — states cannot secede. The territories of India include:
- Territories of the States
- Union Territories specified in the First Schedule
- Other territories that may be acquired
TNPSC Tip: The phrase "Union of States" — the word "Union" was suggested by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar. India is not a mere league of states but a Union where the states have no right to secede.
Article 2 — Admission or Establishment of New States
Parliament may, by law, admit new states into the Union or establish new states on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit. Example: Sikkim was admitted into the Union in 1975 under Article 2.
Article 3 — Formation of New States and Alteration of Areas
Parliament can:
- Form a new state by separation of territory from an existing state
- Unite two or more states or parts of states
- Increase or diminish the area of any state
- Alter the boundaries or name of any state
Important condition: A Bill under Article 3 can be introduced only on the recommendation of the President, and the President must refer the Bill to the State Legislature for expressing its views (within a specified time). However, Parliament is NOT bound by the views of the State Legislature.
TNPSC Exam Alert: Telangana was carved out of Andhra Pradesh in 2014 under Article 3. Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, and Chhattisgarh were also created in 2000 under Article 3.
Article 4 — Laws Made Under Articles 2 and 3
Laws made under Articles 2 and 3 may make necessary amendments to the First Schedule (list of states) and Fourth Schedule (allocation of seats in Rajya Sabha). Such laws shall not be deemed as constitutional amendments under Article 368.
5. Part II — Citizenship (Articles 5–11)
| Article | Topic |
|---|---|
| 5 | Citizenship at commencement of Constitution |
| 6 | Rights of citizenship of certain persons who migrated from Pakistan |
| 7 | Rights of citizenship of certain migrants to Pakistan |
| 8 | Rights of citizenship of certain persons of Indian origin residing outside India |
| 9 | Persons voluntarily acquiring citizenship of a foreign State — not to be citizens |
| 10 | Continuance of the rights of citizenship |
| 11 | Parliament to regulate the right of citizenship by law (Citizenship Act 1955) |
Key Point: India follows Single Citizenship (unlike the USA which has dual citizenship — Federal + State). The Citizenship Act of 1955 governs citizenship acquisition, termination, and deprivation under Article 11. India does NOT allow dual citizenship, though it provides OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) status.
6. Part III — Fundamental Rights (Articles 12–35)
Fundamental Rights are the basic rights guaranteed to all citizens (and in some cases, non-citizens) of India. They are justiciable — enforceable by courts. Originally there were 7 Fundamental Rights; the Right to Property was removed by the 44th Amendment Act, 1978, making it a legal right under Article 300-A.
The 6 Fundamental Rights at a Glance
| Right | Articles | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Right to Equality | 14–18 | Equality before law, no discrimination, equal opportunity |
| Right to Freedom | 19–22 | Freedom of speech, movement, profession, personal liberty |
| Right Against Exploitation | 23–24 | Prohibition of traffic, forced labour, child labour |
| Right to Freedom of Religion | 25–28 | Freedom of conscience, religion, religious affairs |
| Cultural and Educational Rights | 29–30 | Protection of minorities' language, culture, and institutions |
| Right to Constitutional Remedies | 32–35 | Enforcement of rights through courts; Writs |
Article 12 — Definition of "State"
For the purposes of Part III (Fundamental Rights), the term "State" includes:
- The Government of India and Parliament
- The Government and Legislature of each state
- All local or other authorities within India
- Authorities under the control of the Government of India
Article 13 — Laws Inconsistent with Fundamental Rights
Article 13 is the Guardian of Fundamental Rights. It declares that any law that is inconsistent with or in derogation of Fundamental Rights shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void. This gives courts the power of Judicial Review.
- Pre-constitutional laws (existing before 1950) — void to the extent they are inconsistent with FRs
- Post-constitutional laws — void if they violate FRs
Article 14 — Equality Before Law
The State shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India. This article is available to both citizens and foreigners.
- Equality before law — borrowed from British Constitution (Rule of Law by Dicey)
- Equal protection of laws — borrowed from the US Constitution
Article 15 — Prohibition of Discrimination
The State shall not discriminate against any citizen on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth. Special provisions can be made for:
- Women and children (Article 15(3))
- Socially and educationally backward classes, SC/ST (Article 15(4)) — added by 1st Amendment, 1951
- Economically Weaker Sections — EWS (Article 15(6)) — added by 103rd Amendment, 2019
Article 16 — Equality of Opportunity in Public Employment
There shall be equality of opportunity for all citizens in matters relating to employment or appointment to any office under the State. Exceptions include:
- Reservation for backward classes (Article 16(4))
- Reservation for SCs and STs in promotion (Article 16(4-A)) — 77th Amendment 1995
- Reservations for EWS (Article 16(6)) — 103rd Amendment 2019
Article 17 — Abolition of Untouchability
Untouchability is abolished and its practice in any form is forbidden. The enforcement of any disability arising out of untouchability shall be an offense punishable in accordance with law. The Protection of Civil Rights Act, 1955 was enacted under this article.
TNPSC Fact: Article 17 is absolute — it has no exceptions and applies against both State and private individuals. It is available to all persons, not just citizens.
Article 18 — Abolition of Titles
No title (except military or academic distinctions) shall be conferred by the State. An Indian citizen cannot accept a title from a foreign state. However, awards like Bharat Ratna, Padma Vibhushan, etc., are NOT titles — they are civilian honours (as held by the Supreme Court).
Article 19 — Protection of Six Freedoms
Article 19 guarantees 6 Freedoms to citizens (originally 7 — freedom to acquire property was removed by the 44th Amendment):
| Sub-Article | Freedom Guaranteed | Reasonable Restrictions (Sub-Article) |
|---|---|---|
| 19(1)(a) | Freedom of speech and expression | 19(2) |
| 19(1)(b) | Freedom to assemble peaceably and without arms | 19(3) |
| 19(1)(c) | Freedom to form associations or unions | 19(4) |
| 19(1)(d) | Freedom to move freely throughout India | 19(5) |
| 19(1)(e) | Freedom to reside and settle in any part of India | 19(5) |
| 19(1)(g) | Freedom to practise any profession, trade or business | 19(6) |
Article 20 — Protection in Respect of Conviction for Offences
- Article 20(1) — No ex-post-facto laws (no person shall be convicted for an act that was not an offense when it was committed)
- Article 20(2) — No double jeopardy (no person shall be prosecuted and punished for the same offense more than once)
- Article 20(3) — No self-incrimination (no person accused of any offense shall be compelled to be a witness against himself)
Important: Article 20 cannot be suspended even during a National Emergency (unlike Articles 19 and 21).
Article 21 — Protection of Life and Personal Liberty
No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. This is one of the most important articles in the Constitution. The Supreme Court has expanded its scope over the years to include many implied rights:
- Right to live with dignity
- Right to livelihood
- Right to health
- Right to education (before 86th Amendment)
- Right to privacy (K.S. Puttaswamy case, 2017)
- Right to a clean environment
- Right to free legal aid
- Right against solitary confinement
Landmark Case: Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) — The Supreme Court expanded Article 21 to mean that the procedure must be "right, just, fair, and reasonable" — borrowing the concept of "due process" from the US Constitution.
Article 21-A — Right to Education
Added by the 86th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2002, Article 21-A provides that the State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of 6 to 14 years in such a manner as the State may, by law, determine. This led to the enactment of the Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009.
Article 22 — Protection Against Arrest and Detention
- No person arrested shall be detained without being informed of the grounds of arrest
- Right to consult and be defended by a legal practitioner of his choice
- Every arrested person must be produced before the nearest magistrate within 24 hours
- No person can be detained beyond 24 hours without the authority of a magistrate
However, these protections do NOT apply to: (a) enemy aliens, (b) persons arrested under Preventive Detention Laws.
Articles 23 & 24 — Right Against Exploitation
Article 23: Prohibits trafficking in human beings and begar (forced labour). Any violation shall be an offense punishable by law. The Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976 was enacted under this article.
Article 24: Prohibits employment of children below the age of 14 years in any factory, mine, or other hazardous employment.
Articles 25–28 — Right to Freedom of Religion
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 25 | Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice, and propagation of religion |
| 26 | Freedom to manage religious affairs (establish institutions, manage own affairs in matters of religion) |
| 27 | Freedom from payment of taxes for the promotion of any particular religion |
| 28 | Freedom from attending religious instruction in State-funded educational institutions |
Articles 29 & 30 — Cultural and Educational Rights
Article 29: Protects the right of any section of citizens having a distinct language, script, or culture to conserve the same. No citizen shall be denied admission into any educational institution maintained by the State solely on grounds of religion, race, caste, or language.
Article 30: All minorities — religious or linguistic — have the right to establish and administer educational institutions of their choice. The State shall not discriminate against minority institutions in granting aid.
Article 32 — Right to Constitutional Remedies
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar called Article 32 the "Heart and Soul of the Constitution." It gives the right to move the Supreme Court directly for the enforcement of Fundamental Rights. The Supreme Court can issue the following writs:
| Writ | Meaning | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Habeas Corpus | You may have the body | To release a person from illegal detention |
| Mandamus | We command | To command a public authority to perform its legal duty |
| Prohibition | To forbid | To prevent lower courts from exceeding jurisdiction |
| Certiorari | To be certified | To quash orders of lower courts/tribunals |
| Quo Warranto | By what authority | To challenge the legality of a person claiming a public office |
Note: Article 226 gives High Courts the power to issue writs for enforcement of both Fundamental Rights AND for any other purpose. Article 32 (SC) is a Fundamental Right itself, whereas Article 226 (HC) is not a Fundamental Right — it is a Constitutional Right.
7. Part IV — Directive Principles of State Policy (Articles 36–51)
DPSPs are guidelines to the Central and State governments to keep in mind while framing laws and policies. They are non-justiciable — not enforceable by courts. Borrowed from the Irish Constitution. They aim to establish a welfare state.
Classification of DPSPs
| Type | Articles | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Socialistic | 38, 39, 39A, 41, 42, 43, 43A, 47 | Social and economic justice, equal pay, free legal aid |
| Gandhian | 40, 43, 43B, 46, 47, 48 | Village panchayats, cottage industries, prohibition, cow protection |
| Liberal-Intellectual | 44, 45, 48A, 49, 50, 51 | Uniform civil code, early childhood care, environment, separation of judiciary |
Key DPSP Articles for TNPSC
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 38 | State to secure social order for promotion of welfare of people |
| 39 | Equal pay for equal work for men and women; prevent concentration of wealth |
| 39A | Free legal aid (added by 42nd Amendment 1976) |
| 40 | Organisation of village panchayats |
| 41 | Right to work, education, and public assistance in certain cases |
| 42 | Just and humane conditions of work and maternity relief |
| 43 | Living wage and conditions of work for workers |
| 43A | Participation of workers in management of industries (42nd Amendment) |
| 44 | Uniform Civil Code throughout India |
| 45 | Early childhood care and education for children below 6 years (amended by 86th Amendment) |
| 46 | Promotion of educational and economic interests of SCs, STs, and weaker sections |
| 47 | Raise the level of nutrition, standard of living; prohibit intoxicating drinks |
| 48 | Organisation of agriculture and animal husbandry; prohibit slaughter of cows |
| 48A | Protection and improvement of environment and safeguarding forests and wildlife (42nd Amendment) |
| 49 | Protection of monuments and places of national importance |
| 50 | Separation of judiciary from executive |
| 51 | Promotion of international peace and security |
8. Part IV-A — Fundamental Duties (Article 51-A)
Added by the 42nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1976 on the recommendation of the Swaran Singh Committee. Originally 10 duties were added. The 86th Amendment, 2002 added the 11th duty. Borrowed from the Constitution of USSR.
TNPSC Trick: Fundamental Duties are non-justiciable (like DPSPs) — they cannot be enforced by courts. But they serve as a moral obligation.
11 Fundamental Duties
- Abide by the Constitution and respect national symbols
- Cherish and follow noble ideals of the freedom struggle
- Uphold and protect sovereignty, unity, and integrity of India
- Defend the country and render national service when called
- Promote harmony and spirit of common brotherhood
- Preserve the rich heritage of our composite culture
- Protect and improve the natural environment
- Develop scientific temper, humanism, and spirit of inquiry
- Safeguard public property and abjure violence
- Strive towards excellence in all spheres of individual and collective activity
- (11th Duty — 86th Amendment 2002) Provide opportunities for education to children between the ages of 6 and 14 years (duty of parents/guardians)
9. Common Mistakes in TNPSC Exams
| Common Mistake | Correct Answer |
|---|---|
| Article 19 has 7 freedoms | Only 6 freedoms (right to acquire property removed by 44th Amendment) |
| Article 32 — High Court | Article 32 — Supreme Court; Article 226 — High Court |
| DPSPs are justiciable | DPSPs are non-justiciable |
| Fundamental Duties added by 44th Amendment | Added by 42nd Amendment 1976 |
| Article 21 — only citizens | Article 21 applies to all persons including foreigners |
| Right to Education — Article 21 | Right to Education is Article 21-A (86th Amendment 2002) |
| Article 17 can be suspended | Article 17 is absolute — it cannot be suspended even during Emergency |
📌 Revision Summary Table — Part III (Fundamental Rights)
| Article | Topic | Available to |
|---|---|---|
| 12 | Definition of State | — |
| 13 | Void laws inconsistent with FRs | — |
| 14 | Equality before law | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 15 | No discrimination on 5 grounds | Citizens only |
| 16 | Equality in public employment | Citizens only |
| 17 | Abolition of untouchability | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 18 | Abolition of titles | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 19 | 6 Freedoms | Citizens only |
| 20 | Protection against conviction | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 21 | Life and personal liberty | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 21-A | Right to Education (6–14 years) | Citizens only |
| 22 | Protection against arrest | Citizens + Foreigners (exceptions) |
| 23 | Prohibition of trafficking and forced labour | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 24 | Prohibition of child labour (<14 yrs) | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 25 | Freedom of religion | Citizens + Foreigners |
| 29–30 | Cultural and educational rights | Citizens only (minorities) |
| 32 | Right to Constitutional Remedies (SC) | Citizens + Foreigners |
✅ Part 1 Complete — Continue to Part 2 for Union Government, State Government, Emergency Provisions, Amendment Process, and Previous Year TNPSC Questions.
-
TNEB TNPSC Group 1 TNPSC Group 2 TNPSC Group 4 TNPSC VAO
-
TNPSC Group 1 TNPSC Group 2 TNPSC Group 4 TNPSC VAO
-
TNPSC Group 1 TNPSC Group 2 TNPSC Group 4 TNPSC VAO