DATE- 1-2-2020 NA UNIT TEST MATE PUSTIKA MA NISPATTI NO KRAM LAKHVA MA MADADRUP PDF COPY DOWNLOAD KARO

DATE- 1-2-2020 NA UNIT TEST MATE PUSTIKA MA NISPATTI NO KRAM LAKHVA MA MADADRUP PDF COPY DOWNLOAD KARO

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The right to education for children between 6-14 years is guaranteed by law. But today in India officially 13 states and according to NGOs 22 states did not initiate the process of implementation. By April 1, 2011, only six states and seven Union Territories notified the Act and made rules that too in the last quarter of the year. The law designated National Commission for Protection of Child Rights as a monitoring agency, but it lacks any power to do justice. There is a shortage of teachers in our country and which has not been looked upon yet. Provision of free and compulsory education to all children until they complete the age of 14 years is a Directive Principle of State policy of the Constitution. The right to education is not stated expressly as a fundamental right in Part III. Thus Court has, however, not followed the rule that unless a right is expressly stated as a fundamental right, it cannot be treated as one. Freedom of the press is not expressly mentioned in part III, yet it has been read into and inferred from the freedom of speech and expression and from Article 21 more particularly.

Imparting primary education was left to the parents till 2002, though it was part of the directive principle of state policy. In Unnikrishnan Vs State of Andhra Pradesh, the Supreme Court elevated the status of the right to primary education from a mere directive principle of state policy to the fundamental right. The apex court chose to overrule its own judgment in the Unnikrishnan case in T.M.A. Pai Foundation v State of Karnataka where it held that primary education is a fundamental right. While the state assumed the responsibility of imparting primary education to all children of the 6-14 age group, higher education is thrown open to private institutions. It found a difference in the context of private institutions that are charging capitation fees from the students.  Article 21A is added by the 86th Amendment Act in 2002, which says: “The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of six to fourteen years “.The Supreme Court gave a very clear suggestion in Unnikrishnan judgment in 1993, that education was a fundamental right for all children up to 14 years. Though it is a very positive and progressive step to guarantee the fundamental right to education the modalities and substantial aspects of it are totally left to the discretion of the state which has to make a law to fulfill this obligation.

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