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Preamble-Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity

Topic 04 of 5 · Chapter 02 · Indian Polity

Justice, Liberty, Equality & Fraternity

The four objectives of the Preamble — types of Justice, Liberty, Equality and the concept of Fraternity explained in detail.

1. Overview of the Four Objectives

⚖️
JUSTICE
Social · Economic · Political

🕊️
LIBERTY
Thought · Expression · Belief · Faith · Worship

🤝
EQUALITY
Status · Opportunity

🌟
FRATERNITY
Dignity · Unity · Integrity

💡 Source: These four objectives were inspired by the French Revolution’s motto — Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité (Liberty, Equality, Fraternity). Justice was added by the Indian framers.

2. Justice — Social, Economic, Political

The Preamble promises three types of Justice to all citizens:

Type of JusticeMeaningConstitutional Provisions
Social JusticeNo discrimination based on caste, religion, sex, race, etc. Equal treatment for all.Articles 14–18 (Right to Equality), Article 15 (no discrimination)
Economic JusticeNo discrimination based on wealth. Equal pay for equal work. Reduce economic inequality.Article 39 (DPSP), Article 41, Article 43
Political JusticeEqual political rights for all citizens. Universal adult suffrage. Right to vote and contest elections.Article 326 (Universal Adult Suffrage), Articles 325, 329
⭐ Exam Fact: The concept of Justice in the Preamble was inspired by the Russian Revolution (1917). The ideals of social, economic, and political justice were borrowed from the Soviet Constitution.

3. Liberty — Five Freedoms

The Preamble guarantees Liberty of:

  • Thought — Freedom to think and form opinions
  • Expression — Freedom to express thoughts (Article 19(1)(a))
  • Belief — Freedom to hold any belief
  • Faith — Freedom to have faith in any religion
  • Worship — Freedom to worship as one chooses (Articles 25–28)
✅ Important: Liberty in the Preamble does NOT mean absolute freedom. It is subject to reasonable restrictions. The Preamble says liberty must be consistent with the liberty of others and the needs of society.
💡 Source: The concept of Liberty in the Preamble was inspired by the French Revolution and the US Bill of Rights.

4. Equality — Status and Opportunity

The Preamble promises Equality of:

  • Status — All citizens are equal before the law; no one is above the law
  • Opportunity — Equal opportunities in public employment and education
TypeMeaningArticle
Equality before LawEveryone is subject to the same lawsArticle 14
No DiscriminationNo discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birthArticle 15
Equal OpportunityEqual opportunity in public employmentArticle 16
Abolition of UntouchabilityUntouchability abolished and its practice forbiddenArticle 17
Abolition of TitlesNo titles of nobility (except military/academic)Article 18
📌 Note: Equality does NOT mean identical treatment. The Constitution allows protective discrimination (reservations for SC/ST/OBC) to achieve substantive equality.

5. Fraternity — Dignity and Unity

Fraternity means a sense of brotherhood among all citizens. The Preamble says fraternity must assure:

  • The dignity of the individual — every person has inherent dignity that must be respected
  • The unity and integrity of the Nation — India is one nation; all citizens are brothers and sisters
✅ Key Point: “Integrity” was added to the Fraternity clause by the 42nd Amendment, 1976. Originally it was “unity of the Nation” — it became “unity and integrity of the Nation.”
⭐ Exam Fact: Fraternity is the only objective in the Preamble that has no corresponding Fundamental Right. It is a moral and social obligation, not a legally enforceable right.
💡 Source: The concept of Fraternity was inspired by the French Revolution (Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité) and Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s vision of a united, casteless society.

6. Key Points for Exam

🔑 Must-Remember Facts

  • Justice has 3 types: Social, Economic, Political
  • Liberty has 5 freedoms: Thought, Expression, Belief, Faith, Worship
  • Equality has 2 aspects: Status and Opportunity
  • Fraternity ensures dignity of individual and unity and integrity of Nation
  • Justice inspired by Russian Revolution (1917)
  • Liberty, Equality, Fraternity inspired by French Revolution
  • Fraternity is the only objective with no corresponding Fundamental Right
  • “Integrity” added to Fraternity clause by 42nd Amendment, 1976
  • Liberty is NOT absolute — subject to reasonable restrictions
  • Equality allows protective discrimination (reservations) for substantive equality