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Title: The Doctrine of Basic Structure: Constitutional Constraint or Judicial Overreach?
Authors: SYEDA MINA FAISAL, Urooj Bashir , Faisal Shahzad Kahn
Journal: The Journal of Research Review
| Category | From | To |
|---|---|---|
| Y | 2024-10-01 | 2025-12-31 |
Publisher: Intellect Educational Research Explorers
Country: Pakistan
Year: 2025
Volume: 2
Issue: 3
Language: en
Keywords: Judicial reviewConstitutional identityAmendment powerRule of lawSeparation of powersConstitutional supremacyDemocratic legitimacyLegal interpretationConstitutional courtsJuridical restraint.
The doctrine of basic structure, first articulated by the Indian Supreme Court in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala 1973, imposes substantive limits on the constitutional amendment powers of the legislature by identifying certain foundational principles that cannot be abrogated. This research investigates whether the doctrine functions as a constitutional safeguard or whether it signifies judicial overreach that undermines democratic legitimacy. The study adopts a doctrinal and comparative legal methodology, analysing key judgments from India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, alongside theoretical critiques concerning separation of powers and constitutional supremacy. It explores the evolving judicial interpretation of basic structure elements such as the rule of law, secularism, and judicial independence and evaluates the legitimacy of courts intervening in constitutionally sanctioned legislative processes. The findings reveal a paradox: while the doctrine acts as a necessary check against authoritarian constitutional amendments, it also centralizes interpretive authority in the judiciary, raising concerns of democratic imbalance. The article concludes that the doctrine is a double-edged sword essential in preserving constitutional identity, yet vulnerable to overextension. Future legal frameworks must strive for clearer definitional contours and procedural safeguards to reconcile constitutional supremacy with democratic governance. The Basic Structure Doctrine BSD, as evolved by constitutional courts most notably in India and later adopted or considered in jurisdictions like Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Malaysia represents a judicially constructed limitation on the power of constitutional amendment. At its core, the doctrine preserves essential features of a constitution from legislative tampering. However, its judicial origins and elastic interpretation raise foundational questions about separation of powers, democratic legitimacy, and judicial overreach. This article explores the theoretical underpinnings of the BSD, its judicial evolution, key case law, comparative perspectives, and critiques. It concludes by assessing whether the doctrine acts as a necessary constitutional constraint or an instrument of judicial overreach undermining democratic will.
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