Indian Constitution Part 2: DPSPs, Fundamental Duties, Key Amendments, President & Governor
Directive Principles, Fundamental Duties, constitutional amendments, President and Governor powers — the second most tested polity topic in Kerala PSC. Based on NCERT Class 9-10.
After Fundamental Rights, DPSPs and constitutional amendments are the next highest-weight polity topics. Expect 4-6 questions per paper. These notes complete the polity picture.
Directive Principles of State Policy (Part IV, Articles 36-51)
DPSPs are guidelines for the government to create social and economic conditions for a just society. They are not enforceable by courts (unlike Fundamental Rights) but are fundamental in governance.
Classification of DPSPs
Socialistic Principles:
| Article | Directive |
|---|---|
| Art. 38 | State shall promote welfare; minimise inequality in income, status, facilities |
| Art. 39 | Equal right to adequate livelihood; equal pay for equal work; prevent concentration of wealth |
| Art. 39A | Free legal aid to the poor (added by 42nd Amendment) |
| Art. 41 | Right to work, education, and public assistance in unemployment, old age, sickness |
| Art. 42 | Just and humane conditions of work; maternity relief |
| Art. 43 | Living wage for workers; cottage industries promotion |
| Art. 47 | Raise nutrition levels; improve public health; prohibit intoxicating drinks |
Gandhian Principles:
| Article | Directive |
|---|---|
| Art. 40 | Organise village panchayats (local self-government) |
| Art. 43 | Promote cottage industries |
| Art. 46 | Promote educational and economic interests of SC/ST and weaker sections |
| Art. 47 | Prohibition of intoxicating drinks and drugs harmful to health |
| Art. 48 | Prohibit slaughter of cows, calves, and other milch/draught cattle |
Liberal-Intellectual Principles:
| Article | Directive |
|---|---|
| Art. 44 | Uniform Civil Code for all citizens |
| Art. 45 | Early childhood care and education for children below 6 years (amended by 86th Amendment) |
| Art. 48 | Protect and improve the environment; safeguard forests and wildlife |
| Art. 48A | Environment protection (added by 42nd Amendment) |
| Art. 49 | Protect monuments and places of national importance |
| Art. 50 | Separation of judiciary from executive |
| Art. 51 | Promote international peace and security |
Fundamental Rights vs DPSPs:
- FRs are justiciable (enforceable by courts); DPSPs are non-justiciable
- FRs are negative (restrict the state); DPSPs are positive (direct the state to act)
- FRs protect individual rights; DPSPs promote social welfare
- In case of conflict: Originally FRs prevailed (Champakam Dorairajan, 1951); later amended so DPSPs under Art. 39(b)(c) can override FRs (42nd Amendment)
Key DPSP PSC Questions
- Uniform Civil Code? — Article 44 (still not implemented nationally)
- Village Panchayats? — Article 40
- Prohibition of cow slaughter? — Article 48
- Free legal aid? — Article 39A (42nd Amendment)
- Separation of judiciary from executive? — Article 50
- Are DPSPs enforceable? — No, they are non-justiciable
Fundamental Duties (Part IVA, Article 51A)
Added by the 42nd Amendment (1976) based on the Swaran Singh Committee recommendation. Originally 10 duties; the 86th Amendment (2002) added the 11th duty.
The 11 Fundamental Duties
- Abide by the Constitution and respect the national flag and anthem
- Cherish and follow the noble ideals of the freedom struggle
- Uphold and protect sovereignty, unity, and integrity of India
- Defend the country and render national service when called upon
- Promote harmony among all people; renounce practices derogatory to women’s dignity
- Value and preserve the rich heritage of composite culture
- Protect and improve the natural environment including forests, lakes, rivers, wildlife
- Develop scientific temper, humanism, and the spirit of inquiry and reform
- Safeguard public property and abjure violence
- Strive towards excellence in all spheres of individual and collective activity
- Provide opportunities for education to child/ward aged 6-14 (added by 86th Amendment, 2002)
PSC facts:
- Total duties: 11 (not 10)
- Added by: 42nd Amendment (Swaran Singh Committee)
- 11th duty added by: 86th Amendment (same amendment that added Art. 21A)
- Duties are non-justiciable (like DPSPs)
- Duties apply only to citizens (not foreigners)
The President of India
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Article | Articles 52-62 |
| Elected by | Electoral college (elected MPs of both Houses + elected MLAs of all states + Delhi & Puducherry) |
| Term | 5 years (can be re-elected) |
| Qualification | Indian citizen, 35+ years, eligible for Lok Sabha membership |
| Impeachment | By Parliament under Article 61 (2/3 majority of total membership of both Houses) |
| Salary | ₹5,00,000 per month (as of 2023) |
Key Presidents of India
| # | President | Period | Key fact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dr. Rajendra Prasad | 1950-1962 | First President; only one to serve two terms |
| 2 | Dr. S. Radhakrishnan | 1962-1967 | First Vice-President; Teacher’s Day (5 Sep) |
| 3 | Dr. Zakir Husain | 1967-1969 | First Muslim President; died in office |
| 5 | Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed | 1974-1977 | Signed Emergency proclamation (1975); died in office |
| 7 | Giani Zail Singh | 1982-1987 | First Sikh President |
| 10 | K.R. Narayanan | 1997-2002 | First Dalit President |
| 11 | A.P.J. Abdul Kalam | 2002-2007 | ”Missile Man”; first scientist-President |
| 12 | Pratibha Patil | 2007-2012 | First woman President |
| 15 | Droupadi Murmu | 2022-present | First tribal President; first from Odisha |
Most asked: First President = Rajendra Prasad. First woman = Pratibha Patil. First Dalit = K.R. Narayanan. “Missile Man” = A.P.J. Abdul Kalam. Current (as of 2026) = Droupadi Murmu.
Powers of the President
| Power | Detail |
|---|---|
| Executive | All executive actions taken in his name; appoints PM, Council of Ministers, Governors, judges |
| Legislative | Summons/prorogues Parliament; joint session (Art. 108); ordinance power (Art. 123) |
| Financial | Money bills introduced only with President’s recommendation; presents Union Budget |
| Judicial | Appoints CJI and SC/HC judges; pardoning power (Art. 72) |
| Emergency | National Emergency (Art. 352), President’s Rule (Art. 356), Financial Emergency (Art. 360) |
President’s Pardoning Power (Article 72)
The President can grant pardon, reprieve, respite, remission, or commutation of sentence in cases of:
- Court martial
- Union law offences
- Death sentence
President vs Governor pardoning: President (Art. 72) can pardon death sentences. Governor (Art. 161) CANNOT pardon death sentences — only the President can.
The Governor
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Article | Articles 153-162 |
| Appointed by | President of India (on advice of Central Government) |
| Term | 5 years (serves at the pleasure of the President) |
| Qualification | Indian citizen, 35+ years |
| Not elected | Governor is appointed, not elected |
Governor’s Powers
| Power | Detail |
|---|---|
| Executive | Appoints CM and Council of Ministers; appoints Advocate General, State Election Commissioner |
| Legislative | Summons/prorogues State Legislature; ordinance power (Art. 213); can reserve bills for President |
| Discretionary | Recommending President’s Rule; appointing CM when no clear majority; reserving bills |
| Pardoning (Art. 161) | Can pardon state law offences; CANNOT pardon death sentences |
Key Constitutional Amendments
| Amendment | Year | Key change |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1951 | Reasonable restrictions on Art. 19; Art. 15(4) reservation |
| 7th | 1956 | Reorganisation of states (linguistic basis) |
| 24th | 1971 | Parliament can amend Fundamental Rights |
| 25th | 1971 | Right to Property curtailed; “amount” replaced by “compensation” |
| 42nd | 1976 | ”Mini Constitution” — added Socialist, Secular, Integrity to Preamble; added Fundamental Duties; DPSPs priority over FRs |
| 44th | 1978 | Removed Right to Property from FRs; restored judicial review; safeguards against Emergency |
| 52nd | 1985 | Anti-defection law (10th Schedule) |
| 61st | 1989 | Voting age reduced from 21 to 18 |
| 73rd | 1992 | Panchayati Raj institutions (11th Schedule) |
| 74th | 1992 | Municipalities (12th Schedule) |
| 86th | 2002 | Right to Education (Art. 21A); 11th Fundamental Duty |
| 91st | 2003 | Size of Council of Ministers capped at 15% of Lok Sabha/Assembly strength |
| 101st | 2016 | GST (Goods and Services Tax) |
| 103rd | 2019 | 10% EWS reservation |
| 104th | 2020 | Extended SC/ST reservation in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies by 10 years |
Must-memorise amendments:
- 42nd (1976) = “Mini Constitution” (added Secular, Socialist, Integrity + Fundamental Duties)
- 44th (1978) = Removed Right to Property
- 73rd (1992) = Panchayati Raj
- 86th (2002) = Right to Education
- 101st (2016) = GST
- 103rd (2019) = EWS reservation
Important Constitutional Bodies
| Body | Article | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Election Commission | Art. 324 | Conducts free and fair elections |
| Union Public Service Commission | Art. 315 | Recruits for central government services |
| State Public Service Commission | Art. 315 | Recruits for state government services |
| Finance Commission | Art. 280 | Recommends distribution of taxes between Centre and States |
| Comptroller and Auditor General | Art. 148 | Audits government accounts; “Guardian of public purse” |
| Attorney General | Art. 76 | Chief legal advisor to Government of India |
| Advocate General | Art. 165 | Chief legal advisor to State Government |
Schedules of the Indian Constitution
| Schedule | Subject |
|---|---|
| 1st | States and Union Territories |
| 2nd | Salaries of President, Governors, judges, etc. |
| 3rd | Oaths and affirmations |
| 4th | Allocation of Rajya Sabha seats to states |
| 5th | Scheduled Areas and Tribal administration |
| 6th | Tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram |
| 7th | Union, State, and Concurrent Lists (legislative powers) |
| 8th | Official Languages (currently 22 languages) |
| 9th | Acts protected from judicial review (added by 1st Amendment) |
| 10th | Anti-defection provisions (added by 52nd Amendment) |
| 11th | Panchayat powers (added by 73rd Amendment) |
| 12th | Municipality powers (added by 74th Amendment) |
PSC favourites:
- 7th Schedule = Union/State/Concurrent Lists
- 8th Schedule = 22 languages
- 10th Schedule = Anti-defection
- 11th Schedule = Panchayat (73rd Amendment)
- 12th Schedule = Municipality (74th Amendment)
Notes based on NCERT Class 9 Democratic Politics and Class 10, supplemented with Laxmikanth’s Indian Polity for advanced topics. Updated April 2026.