By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define a right as a justified claim and distinguish it from a mere desire or preference
  • 2Contrast natural rights theory (Locke), legal rights theory (Bentham), and the modern human rights framework (UDHR, 1948)
  • 3Classify rights into civil, political, economic, social, and cultural types with examples
  • 4Explain the correlation between rights and duties and identify Fundamental Duties in India's Constitution
  • 5Analyse the paradox of the state as both the guarantor and potential violator of rights
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Why this chapter matters
Rights form the philosophical bridge between the Political Theory book and the Indian Constitution — understanding natural rights vs human rights prepares students for the Fundamental Rights chapter. The UDHR (1948) and the rights-duties relationship are directly tested in boards and UPSC GS II.

Rights

"Rights are not gifts from the state. They are claims that individuals make ON the state — and on society."

1. Chapter Overview

What are RIGHTS? Are they 'natural' (God-given, inherent in being human) or are they CREATED by society and the state? This chapter explores: the nature of rights, different kinds of rights (moral, legal, human), the relationship between rights and duties, and why rights are essential to human DIGNITY and democratic CITIZENSHIP.


2. What Are Rights?

  • A right is a JUSTIFIED CLAIM — an entitlement that others (especially the state) are duty-bound to respect
  • Rights are NOT desires or preferences. 'I want a sports car' is a desire, not a right.
  • Rights are CLAIMS that:
    • Are RECOGNISED by society
    • Are PROTECTED by law or social practice
    • Can be ENFORCED (there's a remedy when violated)

3. Where Do Rights Come From?

Natural Rights (Locke, 17th century)

  • Rights are INHERENT in being human — 'natural', God-given, pre-political
  • Life, liberty, and PROPERTY
  • The state exists to PROTECT natural rights (social contract)
  • American Declaration of Independence (1776): 'Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness'
  • Rights are CREATED BY LAW — there are no rights without a state to enforce them
  • 'Natural rights' are 'nonsense upon stilts' (Bentham)
  • Rights are what the legal system SAYS they are

Human Rights (20th century — Modern Synthesis)

  • Rights belong to ALL HUMAN BEINGS by virtue of their HUMANITY — irrespective of any state's laws
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR, 1948): recognises civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights
  • Human rights include: right to life, freedom from torture, right to fair trial, right to education, right to work, etc.
  • They are: UNIVERSAL (apply to all), INALIENABLE (can't be given up), INTERDEPENDENT (you need all of them)

4. Kinds of Rights

TypeExamplesEnforceability
Moral RightsRight to be treated respectfully, right to privacy (partially)Based on moral conscience and social pressure — not always legally enforceable
Legal RightsRight to vote, right to property, right to compensationEnforceable in courts
Civil LibertiesFreedom of speech, assembly, religionProtected by constitution/courts
Political RightsRight to vote, contest electionsDemocratic institutions enforce
Economic RightsRight to work, minimum wage, social securityEnforceability Varies
Cultural RightsMinority language rights, religious freedomConstitution/courts

5. Rights and Duties

  • Rights and duties are CORRELATIVE. My right = YOUR duty (to respect it).
  • Critics argue: modern discourse focuses ONLY on rights ('I have the right to...') and neglects duties ('I have the duty to...').
  • The Indian Constitution BOTH: Fundamental Rights (Part III) + Fundamental Duties (Part IVA, added 1976)
  • Fundamental Duties include: respect the Constitution, uphold sovereignty, promote harmony, protect environment, develop scientific temper, etc.
  • Duties give rights their MORAL FOUNDATION: I can claim rights because I AM a responsible member of the community.

6. Rights and the State

  • In a DEMOCRACY: the state PROTECTS rights (constitution, courts, free press, elections)
  • In an AUTHORITARIAN state: the state VIOLATES rights (censorship, arbitrary detention, suppression of dissent)
  • The state is BOTH the guarantor of rights AND their potential violator. This is why constitutions LIMIT the state.

7. Exam Focus

  1. Definition of rights — justified claims, entailed duties
  2. Natural rights (Locke) vs Legal rights (Bentham) vs Human rights (UDHR, 1948)
  3. Kinds of rights — civil, political, economic, cultural
  4. Rights and duties — correlation, Fundamental Duties
  5. The state as both guarantor and potential violator of rights

8. Conclusion

Rights are the language in which we make MORAL CLAIMS on society:

  • NATURAL? Or LEGAL? The modern answer is: HUMAN RIGHTS — universal, inalienable, interdependent
  • KINDS: Civil, political, economic, cultural — you need ALL of them for a life of dignity
  • DUTIES: Rights without duties are hollow. Duties without rights are tyranny.
  • THE STATE: It's the PROTECTOR of rights — but also their greatest THREAT. Constitutions exist to bind the state TO rights.

Rights are not about what the powerful are willing to give. They are about what every human being is entitled to DEMAND.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Natural Rights — John Locke (17th century)
Rights are INHERENT in human beings — God-given, pre-political, inalienable; the state's purpose is to PROTECT them; core natural rights: life, liberty, property
Locke's theory influenced the American Declaration of Independence (1776): 'Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness'
Legal Rights — Jeremy Bentham (19th century)
Rights are CREATED BY LAW — there are no rights without a state to enforce them; 'Natural rights are nonsense upon stilts' (Bentham)
Utilitarian view: rights are legal constructs, not natural facts; they exist because they promote social utility
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR, 1948)
Adopted by UN General Assembly on 10 December 1948; declares civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights as universal, inalienable, and interdependent for ALL human beings
NOT a legally binding treaty but a moral benchmark; India voted in favour; forms the basis of international human rights law
Fundamental Duties — Article 51A (Part IVA)
Added by 42nd Amendment (1976); 11 duties including: respect Constitution, uphold sovereignty/integrity, promote harmony, protect environment, develop scientific temper, safeguard public property, strive for excellence
Non-justiciable but courts can use them to interpret Fundamental Rights
Rights-Duties Correlation
My right = YOUR duty to respect/not interfere; rights and duties are two sides of the same coin — I can claim rights because I am a responsible member of the community who also accepts duties
This correlation is the philosophical foundation of the Fundamental Duties chapter in the Constitution
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Writing that 'rights are what the government gives you'
Rights are CLAIMS that individuals make on the state — not gifts. The state PROTECTS pre-existing rights (Locke) or CREATES legal rights (Bentham). In either case, rights are not arbitrary favours; they are entitlements that the state is duty-bound to respect.
WATCH OUT
Confusing human rights with Fundamental Rights in the Indian Constitution
Human rights (from the UDHR, 1948) are universal, moral claims recognised by international law. Fundamental Rights (Part III, Indian Constitution) are legally enforceable rights in India. Some overlap (e.g., right to life), but Fundamental Rights are specific to Indian citizens/residents and are justiciable in Indian courts — human rights exist even without a court to enforce them.
WATCH OUT
Saying 'Locke believed in three rights: life, liberty, and happiness'
John Locke specified LIFE, LIBERTY, and PROPERTY as the three natural rights. It was the American Declaration of Independence (Jefferson, 1776) that changed 'property' to 'the pursuit of Happiness.' In CBSE exams, Locke's rights = life, liberty, property.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· types of rights
Distinguish between natural rights and legal rights. Name the key thinker associated with each.
Show solution
Natural rights (John Locke): rights are inherent in human beings — they exist independently of any state or law, derived from human nature or God. The state's purpose is to protect them. Core natural rights: life, liberty, property. Legal rights (Jeremy Bentham): rights are created by law — they exist only when a state recognises and enforces them. 'Natural rights are nonsense upon stilts' — without a court to enforce a right, it is just a moral aspiration.
Q2MEDIUM· UDHR and human rights
What is the Universal Declaration of Human Rights? What are its key features? Is it legally binding?
Show solution
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 10 December 1948 (Human Rights Day), in the aftermath of the Holocaust and World War II. It is a comprehensive statement of the rights belonging to ALL human beings by virtue of their humanity. Key features: 1) Universal — applies to every human being regardless of nationality, race, religion, or gender, 2) Inalienable — these rights cannot be taken away or given up, 3) Interdependent — civil and political rights AND economic, social, cultural rights are equally important and interconnected, 4) Comprehensive — covers civil rights (right to life, freedom from torture), political rights (right to vote, free speech), economic rights (right to work, fair wages), social rights (right to education, health), and cultural rights (right to participate in cultural life). Is it legally binding? No — the UDHR is a DECLARATION, not a treaty. It is not directly enforceable in national courts. However, it has moral authority as a universal standard and has formed the basis for legally binding instruments such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), both 1966.
Q3HARD· rights and the state
Explain the paradox that the state is simultaneously the greatest protector and the greatest violator of rights. How does the Indian Constitution resolve this paradox?
Show solution
Rights and the state exist in a paradoxical relationship. On one hand, the state is the PROTECTOR of rights: it creates the legal framework that makes rights enforceable, maintains law and order that enables people to exercise their rights safely, operates courts that provide remedies when rights are violated, and is bound by the constitution to protect fundamental freedoms. Without a state, rights are just moral aspirations — the strong would dominate the weak. On the other hand, the state is also the greatest VIOLATOR of rights: it can censor speech, imprison critics, discriminate against minorities, use police force against protesters, and conduct surveillance on citizens. History is full of examples — Nazi Germany systematically violated every human right while claiming legal authority; Emergency in India (1975-77) suspended fundamental rights. This is the paradox: you need the state to protect rights, but the state is also what you need to be protected FROM. The Indian Constitution resolves this paradox through several mechanisms: 1) Fundamental Rights (Part III, Articles 12-35) are enforceable against the STATE — they bind Parliament, state legislatures, and the executive; 2) Article 13: any law inconsistent with Fundamental Rights is void — Parliament cannot override rights; 3) Article 32 (Right to Constitutional Remedies, the 'heart and soul' per Ambedkar): every citizen can directly approach the Supreme Court if Fundamental Rights are violated — the court issues writs to enforce rights against the state; 4) Judicial review: courts can strike down state actions that violate rights; 5) An independent judiciary with security of tenure — judges cannot be fired for ruling against the government. The Constitution treats the state as necessary (to protect rights) but potentially dangerous (hence all these limits). Constitutionalism — the subordination of the state to the Constitution — is the mechanism for managing this paradox.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • A right is a justified CLAIM — not a desire; it is recognised by society, protected by law or practice, and can be enforced
  • Natural rights (Locke, 17th century): inherent, pre-political, inalienable — life, liberty, property; basis of US Declaration of Independence (1776)
  • Legal rights (Bentham, 19th century): created by law — 'natural rights are nonsense upon stilts'; no law = no right
  • Human rights (UDHR, 1948): universal, inalienable, interdependent — apply to all humans regardless of nationality; adopted 10 December 1948
  • Types of rights: civil (speech, assembly), political (vote, contest elections), economic (work, minimum wage), social (education, health), cultural (minority language)
  • Rights and duties are CORRELATIVE: my right = your duty to respect it
  • Fundamental Duties: Article 51A, Part IVA, added by 42nd Amendment (1976) — non-justiciable but courts may use them to interpret FRs
  • The state is both PROTECTOR of rights (courts, laws, police) and potential VIOLATOR (censorship, detention, discrimination) — constitutions exist to bind the state to rights

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer2-41Natural vs legal vs human rights, OR types of rights, OR rights-duties correlation
Long Answer61UDHR and its features, OR rights and the state (protector and violator), OR how India protects rights
Prep strategy
  • Memorise the three theories of rights with their key thinker, year, and core argument: Locke (natural rights, 17th century, life/liberty/property), Bentham (legal rights, 19th century, nonsense on stilts), UDHR (human rights, 1948, universal/inalienable/interdependent)
  • Learn the five TYPES of rights with one example each: civil (speech), political (vote), economic (minimum wage), social (education), cultural (minority language rights) — this table is a common short-answer format
  • The rights-duties correlation is a favourite 2-4 mark topic — always cite Fundamental Duties (Article 51A, added 1976 by 42nd Amendment) when discussing duties in the Indian context

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Habeas Corpus and Rights Against Arbitrary Detention

The right to not be arbitrarily detained (Article 22) and the writ of Habeas Corpus (Article 32/226) are direct embodiments of Locke's natural rights tradition. Every time a person challenges illegal detention in court, they are invoking the political theory that the state exists to protect, not to imprison, its citizens.

UDHR at 75 — Global Human Rights

In 2023, the UDHR completed 75 years. Despite its non-binding status, it has shaped international law, national constitutions, and global advocacy. India's National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), established in 1993, operates within the UDHR framework and receives complaints about human rights violations by state authorities.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For questions comparing theories of rights, always present all three (natural, legal, human rights) even if only two are asked — it shows comprehensive knowledge
  2. When explaining UDHR, mention the specific date and context (10 December 1948, post-Holocaust) — this contextualisation earns extra credit in board exams
  3. For rights-duties correlation, cite Article 51A (Fundamental Duties, added 1976) and name two or three specific duties — this makes the answer concrete and India-specific
  4. In answers about the state as protector/violator, give a historical Indian example (Emergency 1975-77 when Fundamental Rights were suspended) alongside the theoretical argument — examiners reward applied knowledge

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study the difference between 'negative rights' (require the state to REFRAIN — freedom of speech) and 'positive rights' (require the state to ACT — right to education, healthcare); this distinction connects rights theory to the freedom chapter and is directly tested in UPSC Political Science and Law optionals
  • Read about the international debate over whether economic, social, and cultural rights are 'real' rights or aspirational goals — the Western-libertarian view denies them the status of rights; the developing world view (supported by India) insists on their equal importance alongside civil-political rights

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 BoardHigh
UPSC GS IIVery High
UPSC Political Science OptionalHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

No. Fundamental Rights in India are not conditional on performing Fundamental Duties. Even someone who fails in their duties (e.g., does not pay taxes) still retains their fundamental rights and can approach courts for their enforcement. The correlation between rights and duties is a philosophical/moral point, not a legal condition for enjoying rights.

Not directly. The UDHR is not a legally binding treaty. However, the Supreme Court of India has frequently used UDHR provisions to expand the interpretation of Article 21 (right to life). Courts have held that any international human rights norm consistent with Fundamental Rights can be read into the Constitution — making UDHR a persuasive, if not binding, source.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 26 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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