Fundamental Rights in the Constitution of Pakistan

Authors

  • Riaz Begum Advocate Supreme Court of Pakistan, LL.B., M.A. Political Science, MA English Literature Department of Law, Political and Constitutional Studies A research paper for the degree of Master of Philosophy (Constitutional Law and Political Institutions) Faculty of Law, Social, Political and Behavioral Sciences Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v3i3.640

Keywords:

Fundamental Rights, Parliament, Judiciary, Executive, Military, 1956 Constitution, 1962 Constitution, 1973 Constitution

Abstract

Fundamental rights constitute the bedrock safeguarding liberties within any constitutional  democracy, asserting the rule of law against the caprice of power. The Constitution of Pakistan,  1973, delineates a comprehensive catalogue of such rights in Articles 8 to 28, reconciling  internationally accepted human rights norms with the ethical imperatives of Islamic jurisprudence.  This investigation canvasses the structural coherence, substantive breadth, and judicial  enforceability of these constitutional liberties, attending to their philosophical foundations, the  jurisprudential trajectory that has shaped their application, and the enduring impediments to their  complete fulfilment. The enquiry also examines the interplay between the rights-affirming clauses  and the deployment of executive authority, highlighting the judiciary’s tripartite role in expanding,  safeguarding, and, when warranted, in restraining the ambit of rights protection. The discussion is  contextualized within a comparative constitutional framework, and the essay culminates in a series  of recommendations designed to fortify rights-oriented governance in Pakistan.

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Published

2025-09-30