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View Weekly PageAnswer: Comprehensive coverage of social, economic, cultural rights with non-justiciable moral force
Comparative DPSP perspectives: (a) India's distinctive features: (i) Comprehensive coverage: Articles 36-51 address wide range of social, economic, cultural rights (welfare, education, environment, international peace), (ii) Non-justiciable moral force: Article 37 declares DPSP not enforceable by courts but fundamental in governance; balance between judicial restraint, transformative vision, (iii) Synthetic philosophy: Blend of socialist, Gandhian, liberal-intellectual principles reflects India's diverse constitutional heritage, (b) Contrast with other constitutions: (i) Ireland: Directive Principles of Social Policy similar to India's DPSP; also non-justiciable, guide legislation, (ii) Spain: Constitutional principles guide policy but some socio-economic rights justiciable; different balance between enforceability, flexibility, (iii) South Africa: Socio-economic rights (housing, health, education) justiciable with progressive realization standard; more enforceable than India's DPSP, (iv) USA: No equivalent to DPSP; socio-economic policies left to legislative discretion, judicial review focused on civil-political rights, (c) Applications: (i) Policy learning: India can learn from other models (e.g., South Africa's progressive realization) while respecting its constitutional design, (ii) Judicial innovation: Indian courts' use of DPSP to expand Fundamental Rights offers comparative insights for rights adjudication, (iii) Global constitutionalism: India's DPSP contribute to global debates on socio-economic rights, transformative constitutionalism, (d) Illustrates contextual constitutionalism: India's DPSP reflect post-colonial, diverse society's need for comprehensive, flexible framework; balance between moral force, non-justiciability enables adaptive implementation through democratic process.