The Constitution of India is the backbone of India’s political and administrative system. Questions in UPSC Prelims are often conceptual, analytical, and fact-based, focusing on constitutional features, amendments, and structural components.
This section provides a comprehensive yet exam-oriented breakdown of key topics.
1. Salient Features of the Indian Constitution
Understanding the core nature of the Constitution is crucial:
- Lengthiest Written Constitution – Detailed provisions covering governance, rights, and administration
- Blend of Rigidity and Flexibility – Some provisions amendable easily, others require special procedures
- Federal System with Unitary Bias – Strong Centre with federal distribution of powers
- Parliamentary Form of Government – Executive accountable to legislature
- Independent Judiciary – Guardian of Constitution
- Fundamental Rights & Duties
- Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSP)
- Secular State
- Universal Adult Franchise
- Single Citizenship
2. Federal vs Unitary Features
The Constitution is often described as “quasi-federal”.
Federal Features:
- Division of powers (Union, State, Concurrent Lists)
- Written Constitution
- Supremacy of Constitution
- Independent judiciary
Unitary Features:
- Strong Centre (especially during emergencies)
- Appointment of Governors by Centre
- All India Services
- Parliament’s power over State List under certain conditions
👉 UPSC frequently asks conceptual questions comparing federal and unitary characteristics.
3. Parliamentary Form of Government
India follows the Westminster model:
- Nominal Executive – President
- Real Executive – Prime Minister and Council of Ministers
- Collective responsibility to Lok Sabha
- Executive drawn from legislature
Inspired by the system of the United Kingdom.
4. Basic Structure Doctrine
A landmark principle evolved by the judiciary:
- Established in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala
- Parliament can amend the Constitution, but cannot alter its basic structure
Core Elements:
- Supremacy of Constitution
- Rule of law
- Judicial review
- Separation of powers
- Federalism
- Secularism
👉 Important for both Prelims and Mains.
5. Procedure of Constitutional Amendment (Article 368)
The amendment process balances rigidity and flexibility.
Types of Amendments:
- Simple Majority (not under Article 368)
- Special Majority
- Special Majority + State Ratification
Key Features:
- Initiated only in Parliament
- No referendum provision
- President must give assent
👉 Frequently tested concept in Prelims.
6. Important Constitutional Amendments
Focus on frequently asked amendments:
42nd Amendment Act (1976)
- Known as “Mini Constitution”
- Added Fundamental Duties
- Strengthened Centre
- Added words “Socialist”, “Secular”, “Integrity”
44th Amendment Act (1978)
- Reversed excesses of Emergency
- Restored civil liberties
- Made Article 352 stricter
73rd Amendment Act (1992)
- Constitutional status to Panchayati Raj
- Added 11th Schedule
74th Amendment Act (1992)
- Constitutional status to Urban Local Bodies
- Added 12th Schedule
86th Amendment Act (2002)
- Right to Education (Article 21A)
101st Amendment Act (2016)
- Introduction of GST
- Added cooperative federalism in taxation
👉 These amendments are high-frequency UPSC topics.
7. All 12 Schedules – Key Provisions
Schedules are extremely important for Prelims:
1st Schedule
- States and Union Territories
2nd Schedule
- Salaries of constitutional authorities
3rd Schedule
- Oaths and affirmations
4th Schedule
- Rajya Sabha seat allocation
5th Schedule
- Administration of Scheduled Areas
6th Schedule
- Tribal areas in Northeast
7th Schedule
- Union, State, Concurrent Lists
8th Schedule
- Recognized languages (22 languages)
9th Schedule
- Laws protected from judicial review (subject to Basic Structure)
10th Schedule
- Anti-defection law
11th Schedule
- Panchayati Raj (29 subjects)
12th Schedule
- Municipalities (18 subjects)
8. Parts of the Constitution and Their Relevance
The Constitution is divided into multiple Parts (important for Prelims):
- Part I – Union and its Territory
- Part II – Citizenship
- Part III – Fundamental Rights
- Part IV – DPSP
- Part IVA – Fundamental Duties
- Part V – Union Government
- Part VI – State Government
- Part IX & IXA – Local Governance
- Part XVIII – Emergency Provisions
- Part XX – Constitutional Amendments
👉 Questions are often asked like: “Which Part deals with X?”
How UPSC Asks Questions (Trend Insight)
- Match the following (Schedules / Amendments)
- Statement-based conceptual questions
- Article-based traps (especially Article 368)
- Application of Basic Structure Doctrine
- Comparison (Federal vs Unitary)
Preparation Strategy for Prelims 2026
- Focus on conceptual clarity + factual retention
- Revise Schedules and Amendments multiple times
- Practice previous year questions (PYQs)
- Use standard sources like Laxmikanth
- Link static topics with current affairs
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