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Meaning of Citizenship — Equal Membership & Rights

🎓 Class 11 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 6 — Citizenship ⏱ ~25 min
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Class 11 · Political Theory · Chapter 6

Chapter 6 · Citizenship — Full and Equal Membership of a Political Community

Why does it matter so much that a person is recognised as a citizen of a state? Why do thousands of refugees in the world today struggle for membership in any country at all? What does it mean to belong to a political community as a full and equal member — not as a guest, an outsider or a second-class person? In this part we explore the meaning of citizenship, the contested idea of full and equal membership, the rights it ensures (civil, political, social/economic), and the relationship between the citizen and the nation. We meet T. H. Marshall, Martin Luther King Jr., the slum-dwellers of Bombay, the Olga Tellis case (1985), and the Indian Constitution's promise of inclusive citizenship.

Overview · Why Citizenship Matters

In the world today, the state to which we belong gives us a collective political identity — we think of ourselves as Indians, Japanese, or Germans, depending on the state of which we are members. From that state we expect rights and protection wherever we travel. But the importance of full membership becomes most visible in its absence: think of the thousands of refugees? and illegal migrants in the world who have the bad fortune to be denied membership of any state. They are not guaranteed rights, often live in precarious camps, and treat full membership of a state of their choice as a goal worth struggling for — as Palestinian refugees in the Middle East have done for decades. Citizenship, then, is not a small administrative detail; it is the door through which a person can claim almost every other right in the modern world.

🎯 Learning Objectives
By the end of this part you should be able to: (1) Define citizenship? as full and equal membership of a political community. (2) Distinguish citizenship from nationality?. (3) Identify the three kinds of rights — civil, political and social — that T. H. Marshall associated with citizenship. (4) Discuss debates around marginalised? groups (urban poor, slum-dwellers, tribal forest-dwellers) and equal membership. (5) Explain how the Indian Constitution attempts an inclusive notion of citizenship.

6.1 Introduction — The Meaning of Citizenship

Citizenship? has been defined as full and equal membership of a political community. In the contemporary world, states provide a collective political identity to their members as well as certain rights. Citizens, therefore, expect from their state a bundle of guarantees — and they expect help and protection wherever they may travel. The bundle differs from country to country, but in most democratic states today it includes a few political rights like the right to vote, a few civil rights like the freedom of speech or belief, and a set of socio-economic rights which could include the right to a minimum wage or the right to education. Equality of rights and status is the most basic right of citizenship.

📘 Definition · Citizenship
Citizenship is the full and equal membership of a political community. The state to which a person belongs gives that person a collective political identity, certain rights, and protection — at home and abroad.

6.1.1 The Importance of Membership — and Its Denial

The importance of full membership of a state can be appreciated only when we look at the condition of those who have been denied it. Across the world today, thousands of people are forced to live as refugees or illegal migrants because no state is willing to grant them membership. They have lost — or never had — the protection that membership ordinarily confers. They cannot legally work, educate their children, own property, vote, or even travel freely. For them, full membership of some state of their choice is a goal for which they are willing to struggle. The Palestinian refugees in the Middle East, displaced for generations, are perhaps the best-known example, but the world has many others — refugees in the Darfur region of Sudan, Burmese refugees, Bangladeshi refugees, refugees from civil wars in Asia and Africa.

6.1.2 Citizenship Is Won by Struggle, Not Granted as a Gift

Each of the rights now enjoyed by citizens has been won after struggle. Some of the earliest struggles were fought by people to assert their independence and rights against powerful monarchies. Many European countries witnessed such struggles, some of them violent — like the French Revolution in 1789. In the colonies of Asia and Africa, demands for equal citizenship became part of the struggle for independence from colonial rule. In South Africa, the black African population had to undertake a long struggle against the ruling white minority for equal citizenship — a struggle that continued until the early 1990s. And struggles for full membership and equal rights continue even now in many parts of the world. In India, the women's movement and the dalit movement? have sought to change public opinion by drawing attention to needs and to influence government policy so that equal rights and opportunities become a lived reality, not just words on paper.

Citizenship — A Two-Way Bond CITIZEN ↔ STATE a two-way bond RIGHTS · Civil — speech, belief, fair trial · Political — vote, contest · Social — education, health · Equality before law · Protection abroad what the state owes the citizen OBLIGATIONS · Obey laws · Settle disputes peacefully · Help fellow citizens · Protect environment & heritage · Negotiate, not use force what citizens owe to each other Equality of rights and status is the most basic right of citizenship.
Figure 6.1 · Citizenship is a two-way bond — rights flow from the state, obligations flow from the citizen, with equality as the cornerstone.

6.1.3 Citizen-to-Citizen Obligations

Citizenship is, however, about much more than the relationship between states and their members. It is also about citizen-to-citizen relations — and it involves certain obligations of citizens to each other and to the society. These would include not just the legal obligations imposed by states (paying taxes, obeying laws) but also a moral obligation to participate in, and to contribute to, the shared life of the community. Citizens are also considered to be the inheritors and trustees of the culture and natural resources of the country — the next generation will inherit what we hand on, for good or ill.

Let's Do It · Citizens at Work in Your Area

The chapter asks: think of some examples of activities of citizens in your area intended to help others, improve the area, or protect the environment. List some of the activities which could be undertaken by young people of your age-group.

  1. Examples to begin with: a residents' welfare association running a weekend literacy class, a youth group cleaning up a local pond, a society organising a tree-planting drive, a college NSS unit hosting a blood-donation camp, neighbours helping during floods or disasters.
  2. For each, identify which kind of obligation it expresses — legal (e.g. helping during a declared emergency) or moral (e.g. caring for an elderly neighbour).
✅ Pointers
Most everyday acts of citizenship — cleaning a footpath, reporting a broken streetlight, helping a stranger find directions, supporting a local school — are moral obligations rather than legal ones, but together they create a thicker shared life. Young people can lead by organising e-waste collection, anti-litter drives, voter-awareness booths during elections, and digital-literacy classes for elders. Citizenship, the chapter reminds us, is a practice, not just a status.

6.2 Full and Equal Membership — Insiders and Outsiders

What does full and equal membership really mean? If you have ever travelled in a crowded railway compartment or bus, you will know how those who fought one another to enter, once inside, suddenly discover a shared interest in keeping others out! A division quickly develops between "insiders" and "outsiders", with outsiders being seen as a threat. Similar processes take place from time to time in cities, regions, and even at the level of the nation as a whole.

If jobs, facilities like medical care or education, and natural resources like land or water are limited, demands may be made to restrict entry to outsiders even though they may be fellow citizens. You may remember the slogan "Mumbai for Mumbaikars" which expressed exactly this feeling. Many similar struggles have taken place in different parts of India and the world. So we must ask: Does full and equal membership mean that citizens should enjoy equal rights and opportunities wherever in the country they may decide to live, study or work? Does it mean that all citizens, rich or poor, should enjoy certain basic rights and facilities? In this section we focus on the first question.

6.2.1 Freedom of Movement and Migration

One of the rights granted to citizens in our country, and in many others, is freedom of movement. This right is of particular importance for workers. Labour tends to migrate in search of jobs when opportunities are not available near home. Some people may even travel outside the country in search of work. Markets for skilled and unskilled workers have developed in different parts of India. I.T. workers may flock to towns like Bangalore. Nurses from Kerala may be found all over the country. The booming building industry in cities attracts workers from different parts of the country, as do infrastructure projects like road-making.

However, resistance often builds up among local people against jobs going to people from outside the area, sometimes at lower wages. Demands may develop to restrict certain jobs to those who belong to the state, or those who know the local language. Political parties may take up the issue. Resistance can even take the form of organised violence against "outsiders". Almost every region of India has experienced such movements. The chapter asks pointedly: Are such movements ever justified?

We become indignant if Indian workers in other countries are ill-treated by the local population. Some of us may also feel that skilled and educated workers have the right to migrate. States may even be proud of their ability to attract such workers. But if jobs are scarce in a region, local residents may resent competition from outsiders. Does the right to freedom of movement include the right to live or work in any part of the country? Another factor: there may be a difference between our response to poor migrants and to skilled migrants. We may not always be as welcoming to poor migrants who move into our areas as we may be to skilled and affluent workers. This raises a sharp question — should poor and unskilled workers have the same right to live and work anywhere as do skilled workers?

🇺🇸 Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement
The 1950s saw the rise of Civil Rights Movements in the southern states of the USA against inequalities between black and white populations. These inequalities were sustained by Segregation Laws through which black people were denied many civil and political rights — separate areas in railways, buses, theatres, housing, hotels and restaurants. Martin Luther King Jr., the great black leader, gave three powerful arguments against segregation. First, every human person is equal in self-worth and dignity, regardless of race or colour. Second, segregation is like "social leprosy" on the body politic — it inflicts deep psychological wounds on those who suffer it. Third, segregation diminishes the quality of life even for the white community: rather than allow black people into community parks, the white community decided to close them; some baseball teams disbanded rather than accept black players. King argued these laws should be abolished and called for peaceful and non-violent resistance: "We must not allow our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence."

6.2.2 Resolving Disputes — The Right to Protest

Disputes may arise even in democratic societies. How should they be resolved? The right to protest is an aspect of the freedom of expression guaranteed to citizens in our Constitution — provided protest does not harm the life or property of other people or the state. Citizens are free to try and influence public opinion and government policy by forming groups, holding demonstrations, using the media, appealing to political parties, or approaching the courts. The courts may give a decision on the matter, or may urge the government to address the issue. It may be a slow process, but varying degrees of success are sometimes possible.

If the guiding principle of providing full and equal membership to all citizens is kept in mind, it should be possible to arrive at an acceptable solution. A basic principle of democracy is that such disputes should be settled by negotiation and discussion rather than by force. This is one of the obligations of citizenship.

Let's Think · Freedom of Movement vs Local Preference

Examine the arguments for and against freedom of movement and occupation throughout the country for citizens. Discuss the following questions raised by the chapter:

  1. Should the long-term inhabitants of a region enjoy preference for jobs and facilities?
  2. Should states be allowed to fix quotas for admissions to professional colleges for students who do not belong to that state?
  3. Are violent movements against "outsiders" ever justified in a democracy?
✅ Pointers
For local preference: Long-time residents may have nowhere else to go, the local economy may be small, and language/culture continuity may be valued. Against: Article 19(1)(d) and (e) guarantee every Indian citizen the right to move freely and reside anywhere in India; restricting this on the basis of birth or language treats fellow citizens as outsiders. State quotas in colleges: Some are constitutionally permitted as reasonable restrictions; an outright bar is not. Violence against outsiders is never justified in a democratic society — the chapter is unambiguous: disputes must be settled by negotiation and discussion, not force. The deeper test in each case is whether the rule treats other Indians as full and equal members or as second-class persons.

6.3 Equal Rights — Citizenship, Equality and the Urban Poor

Are political rights enough? Or does full and equal membership mean that all citizens, rich or poor, should be guaranteed certain basic rights and a minimum standard of living by the state? To explore this question the chapter focuses on one set of citizens: the urban poor. Dealing with the problem of the poor in towns is one of the most urgent challenges before any government today.

6.3.1 Slum-Dwellers and the City

There is a large population of slum-dwellers and squatters in every Indian city. Although they may do necessary and useful work, often at low wages, they are often viewed as unwelcome visitors by the rest of the town population. They may be blamed for straining city resources, or for spreading crime and disease. Conditions in slums are often shocking — many people may be crammed into small rooms with no private toilets, running water or sanitation. Life and property are insecure in a slum.

And yet slum-dwellers make a significant contribution to the urban economy through their labour. They may be hawkers, petty traders, scavengers, domestic workers, plumbers or mechanics. Small businesses such as cane-weaving, textile printing, or tailoring also develop in slums. The city probably spends relatively little on providing slum-dwellers with services such as sanitation or water supply. Awareness of the condition of the urban poor is growing — among governments, NGOs, and among the slum-dwellers themselves. A national policy on urban street vendors was framed in January 2004: there are lakhs of street vendors in our cities, and they often face harassment from police and town authorities. The policy was intended to provide recognition and regulation, so that vendors could continue their profession without harassment provided they obeyed government regulations.

⚖️ Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation, 1985
The Supreme Court gave an important decision regarding the rights of slum-dwellers in Bombay in response to a Public Interest Litigation filed by social activist Olga Tellis against Bombay Municipal Corporation in 1985. The petition claimed the right to live on pavements or in slums because no alternative accommodation was available close to the petitioners' place of work — if forced to move, they would lose their livelihood as well. The Supreme Court held: "Article 21 of the Constitution which guaranteed the right to life included the right to livelihood. Therefore if pavement dwellers were to be evicted they should first be provided alternative accommodation under the right to shelter." This case became a landmark for the rights of the urban poor.

6.3.2 T. H. Marshall — Citizenship, Equality and Three Kinds of Rights

Citizenship is not merely a legal concept. It is also closely tied to the larger ideas of equality and rights. A widely accepted formulation of this relationship was provided by the British sociologist T. H. Marshall (1893–1981). In his book Citizenship and Social Class (1950), Marshall defined citizenship as "a status bestowed on those who are full members of a community. All who possess the status are equal with respect to the rights and duties with which the status is endowed." The key concept in his formulation is equality, and it implies two things: (i) the quality of the rights and duties improves over time, and (ii) the quantity of people upon whom they are bestowed grows.

📖
British Sociologist · 1893–1981
T. H. Marshall & the Three Kinds of Citizenship Rights
In Citizenship and Social Class (1950), Marshall identified three kinds of rights involved in citizenship — civil (life, liberty, property), political (participation in governance), and social (education, employment). Together they make it possible for a citizen to lead a life of dignity. Marshall saw social class as a "system of inequality"; citizenship counters it by making people equal in status, even if they are unequal in wealth.
Marshall's Three Kinds of Citizenship Rights CIVIL Life, liberty, property, free trial POLITICAL Vote, contest, participate in rule SOCIAL Education, work, basic services Together they make it possible for the citizen to lead a life of dignity.
Figure 6.2 · The three kinds of rights Marshall associated with full citizenship — equality is their unifying principle.

Marshall saw social class as a "system of inequality". Citizenship, he argued, ensures equality by countering the divisive effects of class hierarchy. It thus facilitates the creation of a better-integrated and more harmonious community. The point matters for the urban poor: even when a slum-dweller possesses a voter's identity card and a constitutional right to vote, the absence of social rights — basic shelter, sanitation, schooling — can hollow out his political rights. Marshall's lesson is that civil, political and social rights together are needed to make equal citizenship real.

6.3.3 Marginalised Groups — Tribal People and Forest Dwellers

Slum-dwellers are also becoming aware of their rights and are beginning to organise to demand them. They have sometimes even approached the courts. Even a basic political right like the right to vote can be difficult for them to exercise — to be included in the list of voters a fixed address is required, and squatters and pavement-dwellers may find it difficult to provide this.

Among other groups becoming marginalised? in our society are tribal people and forest dwellers. These people depend on access to forests and other natural resources to maintain their way of life. Many of them face threats because of the pressure of growing populations and the search for land and resources to maintain them. Pressures from commercial interests wanting to mine the resources in forests or coasts pose another threat to their way of life and livelihood, as does the tourist industry. Governments are struggling with the question of how to protect these people and their habitat without endangering the development of the country. This is an issue that affects all citizens, not just tribal people.

To ensure equal rights and opportunities for all citizens cannot be a simple matter for any government. Different groups may have different needs and problems, and the rights of one group may sometimes conflict with the rights of another. Equal rights for citizens need not mean uniform policies for all people — since different groups have different needs. If the purpose is not just to make policies that apply in the same way to all, but to make people more equal, the different needs and claims of people would have to be taken into account when framing policies. Changes in the world situation, the economy, and society demand new interpretations of the meaning and rights of citizenship. The formal laws regarding citizenship are only the starting point — the interpretation of laws is constantly evolving.

Let's Think · The Land Question in Zimbabwe

According to official figures (the chapter quotes), in Zimbabwe some 4,400 white families owned 32% of agricultural land — about 10 million hectares. About one million black peasant families owned just 16 million hectares — that is, 38% of the land. While the white families' land was fertile and irrigated, the land with the black population was less fertile and unirrigated. A century ago, the whites had taken the fertile land from the native people. White families had now been in Zimbabwe for generations and considered themselves Zimbabweans. The total population of whites was just 0.06%. In 1997, President Mugabe announced plans to take over around 1,500 farms.

Question: What ideas from citizenship would you use to support or oppose the claims of black and white citizens of Zimbabwe?

✅ Pointers
Supporting black-citizens' claim: The principle of equal membership and equal rights is violated when historical dispossession produces enduring inequality. The right to a livelihood and the social rights of citizenship demand redistribution. Supporting white-citizens' claim: White Zimbabweans are full citizens by birth and long residence; arbitrary expropriation without due process violates their civil rights to property and equal protection. The chapter's larger lesson: Citizenship rights of one group cannot simply be set against those of another. A democratic state must seek negotiated redistribution — through legal land-reform schemes with compensation and judicial review — rather than force. Both equality and due process are constituents of full citizenship.

6.4 Citizen and Nation — The Indian Constitution and Inclusive Citizenship

The concept of the nation state? evolved in the modern period. One of the earliest assertions about the sovereignty? of the nation state and the democratic rights of citizens was made by the revolutionaries in France in 1789. Nation states claim that their boundaries define not just a territory but also a unique culture and shared history. The national identity may be expressed through symbols like a flag, national anthem, national language, or certain ceremonial practices.

6.4.1 Inclusive vs Exclusive National Identities

Most modern states include people of different religions, languages, and cultural traditions. The national identity of a democratic state is supposed to provide citizens with a political identity that can be shared by all members of the state. Democratic states usually try to define their identity to be as inclusive as possible — that is, to allow all citizens to identify themselves as part of the nation. But in practice, most countries tend to define their identity in a way that makes it easier for some citizens to identify with the state than others. It may also make it easier for the state to extend citizenship to some people and not to others. This would be as true of the United States, which prides itself on being a country of immigrants, as it is of any other country.

France, for instance, claims to be both secular and inclusive. It includes not only people of European origin but also citizens who originally came from other areas such as North Africa. Culture and language are important features of its national identity, and all citizens are expected to assimilate into it in the public aspects of their lives. They may, however, retain their personal beliefs and practices in their private lives. This may seem reasonable, but it is not always simple to define what is public and what is private — this has given rise to controversies. Religious belief is supposed to belong to the private sphere, but sometimes religious symbols and practices may enter public life. You may have heard of demands by Sikh school boys in France to wear the turban to school, and of Muslim girls to wear the head-scarf with their school uniforms. These were disallowed by some schools on the ground that they involved bringing religious symbols into the public sphere of state education. Those whose religions did not demand such practices naturally did not face the same problem. Assimilation into the national culture would be easier for some groups than for others.

6.4.2 Criteria for Granting Citizenship — Variety Across States

The criteria for granting citizenship to new applicants varies from country to country. In countries such as Israel or Germany, factors like religion or ethnic origin may be given priority when granting citizenship. In Germany there has been a persistent demand from Turkish workers — who were at one time encouraged to come and work in Germany — that their children, born and brought up in Germany, should automatically be granted citizenship. This is still being debated. These are only a few examples of the kinds of restrictions that may be placed on citizenship even in democratic countries that pride themselves on being inclusive.

Three Approaches to Defining National Identity SECULAR-INCLUSIVE e.g. France, India Common public culture; private religion permitted but contested boundary between public & private turban / hijab debate ETHNIC / RELIGIOUS e.g. Israel, Germany (older) Religion or descent grants priority to citizenship Long-resident workers may be excluded IMMIGRATION-BASED e.g. United States, Canada Country of immigrants Settlement-based; jus soli / naturalisation Some groups still find it harder to belong No country defines its national identity in a perfectly neutral way — some citizens always find it easier to belong than others.
Figure 6.3 · Different states use different criteria — secular assimilation, ethnic/religious priority, or settlement-based citizenship.

6.4.3 The Indian Constitution — A Unique Experiment in Inclusion

India defines itself as a secular, democratic, nation state. The movement for independence was a broad-based one, and deliberate attempts were made to bind together people of different religions, regions and cultures. The Partition of the country in 1947, when differences with the Muslim League could not be resolved, only strengthened the resolve of Indian leaders to maintain the secular and inclusive character of the nation state they were committed to build. This resolve was embodied in the Constitution.

The Indian Constitution attempted to accommodate a remarkably diverse society. It attempted to provide full and equal citizenship to groups as different as the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, many women who had not previously enjoyed equal rights, some remote communities in the Andaman and Nicobar islands who had had little contact with modern civilisation, and many others. It also tried to find a place for the different languages, religions and practices found in different parts of the country. It had to provide equal rights to all without forcing anyone to give up their personal beliefs, languages or cultural practices. This was therefore a unique experiment, undertaken through the Constitution. The Republic Day parade in Delhi symbolises the attempt of the state to include people of different regions, cultures and religions.

🇮🇳 Citizenship in the Indian Constitution
Provisions about citizenship are found in Part Two of the Constitution and in subsequent laws passed by Parliament. The Constitution adopts an essentially democratic and inclusive notion of citizenship. In India, citizenship can be acquired by birth, descent, registration, naturalisation, or inclusion of territory. The rights and obligations of citizens are listed in the Constitution. There is also a provision (Article 15) that the state shall not discriminate against citizens on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth, or any of them. The rights of religious and linguistic minorities (Articles 29–30) are also protected.

6.4.4 Citizenship as a Project, Not a Finished Fact

Even such inclusive provisions have given rise to struggles and controversies. The women's movement, the dalit movement, and the struggles of people displaced by development projects represent only a few of the struggles being waged by people who feel they are being denied full rights of citizenship. The experience of India indicates that democratic citizenship in any country is a project, an ideal to work towards. New issues are constantly raised as societies change, and new demands are made by groups who feel they are being marginalised. In a democratic state these demands have to be negotiated. Citizenship, in other words, is an ongoing achievement — never quite finished.

Let's Debate · School Uniforms and Religious Symbols

The chapter raises a sharp debate-question: "It is not appropriate for schools, or any other public agencies like the army, to insist on a common uniform and to ban the display of religious symbols such as the turban." Form two teams and argue for and against this proposition.

  1. For the proposition (banning is wrong): A common public sphere can be inclusive without erasing visible markers of identity; the chapter explicitly notes that those whose religions do not demand such symbols never face the same restriction.
  2. Against the proposition (banning is fine): A neutral public sphere requires uniformity; private faith should not enter public-state institutions.
  3. Reach a balanced conclusion: where might the line be drawn between legitimate uniformity (e.g. army battlefield safety) and discriminatory uniformity (e.g. banning a turban that does not endanger anyone)?
✅ Pointers
The chapter's own framing tilts toward inclusive accommodation: a uniform that accidentally penalises some religions while leaving others unaffected violates the principle of equal citizenship. India's approach has historically been more accommodating than France's — Sikh soldiers wear the turban in the Indian Army, and Muslim girls wear hijab in many schools. The deeper test is the chapter's own: which approach makes it easier for all citizens, not just some, to identify themselves with the state?
📋

Competency-Based Questions — Part 1

Case Study: Lakshmi is a domestic worker in Mumbai. She migrated from a village in Bihar fifteen years ago, lives with her family in a pavement settlement near Bandra, and has worked in three middle-class homes for over a decade. She has a voter's card from her village in Bihar but cannot register as a voter in Mumbai because the electoral rolls require a fixed residential address. A municipal demolition drive is now planned for her stretch of pavement. A local NGO is filing a Public Interest Litigation citing the Olga Tellis judgment of 1985. Lakshmi's children attend a slum school but their attendance is sporadic — they are sometimes pulled out for daily-wage construction work.
Q1. Which kind of citizenship right (in T. H. Marshall's framework) is most directly compromised by Lakshmi's inability to register as a voter in Mumbai?
L3 Apply
  • (A) Civil right — life and liberty
  • (B) Political right — participation in governance
  • (C) Social right — education and basic services
  • (D) Cultural right — language and belief
Answer: (B) — The chapter notes that even a basic political right like the right to vote can be difficult for the urban poor because the voter list requires a fixed address. This is a clear case of a political right being undermined by social conditions.
Q2. The NGO's PIL citing Olga Tellis (1985) most directly invokes which constitutional principle?
L4 Analyse
  • (A) Article 21 right to life — including the right to livelihood
  • (B) Article 19 right to free speech and expression
  • (C) Article 25 right to freedom of religion
  • (D) Article 32 jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
Answer: (A) — The Olga Tellis judgment held that Article 21 (right to life) includes the right to livelihood, and therefore pavement-dwellers cannot be evicted without alternative accommodation under the right to shelter.
Q3. In about five sentences, evaluate whether Lakshmi truly enjoys "full and equal membership" of the Indian political community. Use Marshall's three-rights framework.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: Lakshmi is formally an Indian citizen and possesses a voter's card. But the substance of citizenship is thinner. Her political rights are undermined by the fixed-address requirement of electoral rolls — she cannot vote where she lives. Her civil rights are insecure: she lacks formal protection from arbitrary eviction in everyday city governance. Her social rights — education and decent shelter — exist on paper but are not effectively delivered: her children's schooling is sporadic, and she lives without sanitation or guaranteed housing. By Marshall's standard, full citizenship requires the three rights working together; Lakshmi possesses the legal status of citizenship but not the lived equality of status. Her case shows why the chapter calls citizenship a project rather than a finished fact.
HOT Q. Design a four-point municipal "Inclusive Citizenship Charter" for the urban poor that uses the chapter's principles. Include one civil, one political and two social measures.
L6 Create
Hint: Civil — eviction only with prior notice and alternative shelter (Olga Tellis principle). Political — voter registration drives in slums using flexible address documentation (e.g. ration card, employer's letter, NGO certificate). Social (1) — neighbourhood-school placement under RTE 2009 with mid-day meals and free uniforms. Social (2) — recognition cards for street vendors under the 2014 Act, providing protection from arbitrary harassment. End with a commitment to negotiated dispute settlement — exactly as the chapter prescribes.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 1
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): Citizenship is merely a legal status — a question of whether one's name appears on government records.
Reason (R): T. H. Marshall (1950) showed that citizenship is bound up with civil, political and social rights and is closely tied to the larger ideas of equality and dignity.
Answer: (D) — A is false: the chapter explicitly says citizenship is "not merely a legal concept" but is closely related to equality and rights. R is true and is exactly the chapter's reason for rejecting the narrow legal view.
Assertion (A): The Indian Constitution provides citizenship through five paths — birth, descent, registration, naturalisation, and inclusion of territory.
Reason (R): The framers wanted an essentially democratic and inclusive notion of citizenship, capable of accommodating the country's enormous diversity.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. The chapter explicitly lists these five paths and immediately frames them as part of a deliberately inclusive constitutional design.
Assertion (A): A movement that uses violence against fellow Indians from another state because they have taken local jobs is a defensible expression of full and equal citizenship.
Reason (R): A basic principle of democracy, the chapter notes, is that disputes should be settled by negotiation and discussion rather than force — and this is one of the obligations of citizenship.
Answer: (D) — A is false: organised violence against fellow citizens treats them as outsiders and contradicts the principle of equal membership. R is true and supplies the chapter's exact reason — peaceful negotiation is a defining obligation of citizenship.
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