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View Weekly PageAnswer: locus standi
Access to justice and Constitutional Morality: (a) Article 32: Right to move Supreme Court for enforcement of Fundamental Rights; Dr. Ambedkar called it 'heart and soul' because without remedies, rights are meaningless, (b) Constitutional Morality application: (i) S.P. Gupta (1981): Relaxed locus standi (personal injury requirement), allowing any citizen/public-spirited organization to file petition for enforcement of rights of persons unable to approach court due to poverty, ignorance, or social disadvantage, (ii) PIL transformed judicial role: from dispute resolution to social justice delivery, (iii) Enabled courts to address: prison conditions (Hussainara Khatoon), environmental degradation (MC Mehta), bonded labour (Bandhua Mukti Morcha), gender justice (Vishaka), (c) Safeguards: Courts developed filters to prevent frivolous PILs; focus on genuine public interest, marginalized groups, (d) Balance: Access to justice for marginalized vs preventing judicial overreach; Constitutional Morality prioritizes substantive access over formal barriers. Illustrates participatory constitutionalism: rights realization requires active citizen engagement alongside institutional mechanisms.