Constitutional foundations
- Preamble
- Fundamental Rights
- Fundamental Duties
- Directive Principles (DPSP)
- Writs
- Citizenship
- Amendment (Article 368)
- Basic Structure Doctrine
- Schedules of the Constitution
Organs of government
- President
- Vice-President
- PM & Council of Ministers
- Parliament
- Supreme Court
- High Courts & Judiciary
- Governor
- Parliamentary Committees
Federalism & local government
- Centre-State Relations
- Indian Federalism
- Panchayati Raj (73rd Amд)
- Urban Local Govt (74th Amд)
- Emergency Provisions
Constitutional bodies, offices & law
- Election Commission
- CAG
- UPSC
- Attorney General
- Anti-Defection Law
- Representation of People Act
- RTI Act 2005
Related hubs
UPSC angle
Polity is the most scoring static section. Master the Constitution (rights, DPSP, amendments, basic structure), the organs of government, federalism and the constitutional bodies.
Frequently asked questions
What does the Polity hub cover?
The Constitution (Preamble, Fundamental Rights, DPSP, amendments), the organs of government (Parliament, executive, judiciary), federalism and local government, and the constitutional bodies.
Which polity topics are most important for UPSC?
Fundamental Rights, DPSP, Parliament, the judiciary, federalism, the basic-structure doctrine and the constitutional bodies.
Is polity static or current?
Largely static, but it connects to current affairs through amendments, court judgments and the working of institutions.
How should I study polity?
Build the constitutional framework first, then the institutions and their interrelations, and link each to current developments.