Saturday, 13 December 2025

LLM Notes: Free press is indispensable to the functioning of democracy. Discuss the role of media in promoting human rights with reference to judgments of Indian Supreme Court.


 
I. INTRODUCTION (2 marks)

Free press forms the bedrock of democratic governance and serves as a vital instrument for human rights protection. The Indian Constitution does not explicitly mention freedom of press, yet it is recognized as an integral component of Article 19(1)(a)—the right to freedom of speech and expression. The Supreme Court has consistently held that “freedom of speech and of the press lay at the foundation of all democratic organisations” (Romesh Thappar v. State of Madras, 1950). The media functions as the “fourth pillar of democracy” alongside legislature, executive, and judiciary, playing a crucial role in ensuring governmental accountability, protecting fundamental rights, and enabling democratic participation. This answer examines how the free press promotes human rights through transparency, accountability, and democratic dissent, supported by landmark Indian Supreme Court judgments.

II. PRESS FREEDOM AS CONSTITUTIONAL GUARANTEE (2.5 marks)

A. Legal Framework

The freedom of the press derives constitutional protection from Article 19(1)(a) of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees the right to freedom of speech and expression. While the Constitution does not explicitly mention “press,” the Supreme Court has held that press freedom is an integral component of this fundamental right, essential for the proper functioning of democratic governance.

B. Foundational Cases

In Romesh Thappar v. State of Madras (1950), the Supreme Court held that “freedom of speech and of the press lay at the foundation of all democratic organisations, for without free political discussion, no public education, so essential for the proper functioning of the processes of popular government, is possible.” This judgment established that press freedom transcends individual liberty and functions as a prerequisite for democratic functioning.

In Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi (1950), the Court struck down pre-censorship laws, holding that imposition of previous restraint on publication is incompatible with constitutional liberty. The Court observed that restrictions must only be imposed when there is a “clear and present danger” to public order or incitement of violence. This principle established that the burden of proof lies with the state to justify any restriction on press freedom.

C. Limitations on Press Freedom

Under Article 19(2), reasonable restrictions on press freedom are permissible only in cases affecting: sovereignty and integrity of India, security of state, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, decency or morality, contempt of court, defamation, and incitement to offense. Even within these categories, restrictions must be narrowly tailored and proportionate to legitimate state objectives.

III. MEDIA AS WATCHDOG FOR ACCOUNTABILITY AND TRANSPARENCY (3 marks)

A. Right to Information and Governmental Accountability

In State of U.P. v. Raj Narain (1975), the Supreme Court recognized the right to information as a fundamental right flowing from Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution. The Court held that citizens have a constitutional right to know about the activities of public authorities, and that this right is necessary for ensuring transparency and accountability in governance.

The Court observed: “The people have a right to know about the functioning of government agencies.” This judgment established that democratic participation is impossible without citizens having adequate information about governmental actions and decision-making processes. The right to information thus becomes essential for protecting other fundamental rights and preventing governmental abuse.

B. Concept of Open Government

In S.P. Gupta v. Union of India (1982), the Supreme Court held that “the concept of an open government is the direct emanation from the right to know, which is implicit in the right of free speech and expression.” The Court emphasized that transparency in governance is not merely a statutory requirement but a constitutional imperative derived from fundamental rights.

The judgment articulated that democratic participation requires citizens to have information about how government functions. This principle directly links press freedom to human rights protection, as the media becomes the primary vehicle through which information about governmental functioning reaches the public.

C. Media Scrutiny as Preventive Mechanism

In Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar v. State of Maharashtra (1966), the Court held: “A trial held subject to public scrutiny and gaze naturally acts as a check against judicial vagaries, and serves as a powerful instrument for creating confidence of the public in the fairness, objectivity and impartiality of the administration of justice.”

This principle extends beyond courtrooms to all governmental functioning. Media scrutiny acts as a deterrent to arbitrary action and ensures that public institutions remain accountable to the people. When government agencies know that their actions will be subject to media scrutiny and public accountability, they are more likely to comply with constitutional and legal norms, thereby protecting human rights.

IV. MEDIA’S ROLE IN ENABLING DEMOCRATIC DISSENT AND CRITICISM (3 marks)

A. Protection of Critical Speech

In Vinod Dua v. Union of India (2021), the Supreme Court quashed sedition charges against veteran journalist Vinod Dua, who had criticized government policies during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Court observed that “the concept of a free press is freedom of political opinion and at the core of that freedom lies the right to criticize the Government, because it is only through free debate and the free exchange of ideas that Government remains representative of the will of the people and orderly change is effected.”

The judgment established that journalists must be protected in their ability to offer critical appraisal of governmental actions and policies, as this is fundamental to democracy and human rights protection.

B. Journalism as Guardian of Rights

The Supreme Court has held that “freedom of dissent is the safety valve of democracy.” The free press enables citizens to voice grievances, challenge policies, and advocate for change. This function is essential for protecting human rights because it allows oppressed groups to bring attention to violations, mobilize public opinion, and pressure government to implement reforms.

C. Prevention of Authoritarian Tendencies

Through critical reporting and investigative journalism, the media exposes governmental overreach and prevents the concentration of power. The Court has emphasized that democratic governance requires constant vigilance and public scrutiny, which the free press provides. This watchdog function is particularly important for vulnerable and marginalized communities whose rights might otherwise be overlooked.

V. BALANCING PRESS FREEDOM WITH OTHER FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS (2.5 marks)

A. Right to Privacy and Fair Trial

In R. Rajagopal and Ors. v. State of Tamil Nadu (1994), the Supreme Court clarified that the right to privacy is a fundamental right implicit in Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty). While the press has broad freedom to publish matters of public interest, this freedom cannot be used to invade the privacy of individuals without justification.

The judgment established that no public official can file suit for damages in defamation cases based on publications during the execution of their official duties unless the publication is proven false. This principle ensures that the press can scrutinize governmental action without fear of legal harassment while simultaneously protecting individual privacy rights.

B. Media Trials and Fair Trial Rights

The Supreme Court has held that media trials that prejudge guilt and interfere with fair trial processes violate human rights. While the press has freedom to report on legal proceedings, it cannot conduct trial-by-media that undermines the presumption of innocence and the right to fair trial—both fundamental rights under Article 21.

The Court has issued guidelines to prevent prejudicial media coverage that creates public prejudice against accused persons. However, these limitations are designed to prevent egregious violations rather than to curtail legitimate media reporting and public scrutiny of judicial proceedings.

C. Proportionality Doctrine

The Court applies a proportionality test to balance competing rights: whether the restriction on press freedom is necessary, proportionate, and serves a legitimate state objective that outweighs the public interest in free press. This ensures that press freedom is restricted only when necessary to protect other equally important rights.

VI. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND EVOLUTION (1 mark)

Recent judgments have reinforced that courts and media must maintain a supportive relationship within constitutional frameworks. In cases regarding digital media and web content, the Supreme Court has acknowledged that in a “liberal democracy, judiciary and media must support each other” while maintaining their respective independence and accountability.

The Court has expanded the concept of press freedom to include digital media, recognizing that freedom of information and expression transcends traditional print and broadcast journalism. This evolution reflects the understanding that the functions performed by free press—accountability, transparency, democratic dissent—remain essential regardless of the medium through which they are exercised.

VII. CONCLUSION (1 mark)

The Indian Supreme Court has established a robust jurisprudence recognizing that free press is indispensable to democratic functioning and human rights protection. Through landmark judgments, the Court has established that:

1.          Press freedom is a fundamental right essential to democracy, flowing from Article 19(1)(a)

2.          Media functions as a watchdog for governmental accountability and transparency

3.          Right to information is constitutional and necessary for democratic participation

4.          Critical dissent and political opinion are protected core functions of the press

5.          Public scrutiny acts as a check against abuse of power and judicial arbitrariness

6.          Press freedom must be balanced with other rights through proportionality doctrine

The free press thus emerges not as a private right of journalists but as a structural necessity for democratic governance and a powerful instrument for protecting human rights by ensuring governmental accountability, enabling democratic participation, and preventing abuse of state power.

FREE PRESS & HUMAN RIGHTS: EASY MEMORIZATION GUIDE FOR LLM EXAMS

QUICK MEMORY TRICKS & SIMPLIFIED STRUCTURE

PART 1: THE BIG PICTURE (Remember: 4 P’s)

Press = 4 P’s of Democracy

1.          Pillar – Fourth pillar (after Legislature, Executive, Judiciary)

2.          Protection – Protects human rights through accountability

3.          Participation – Enables citizens to participate in democracy

4.          Prevention – Prevents abuse of governmental power

Memory Aid: “PRESS = 4 P’s = Perfect for Democracy”

PART 2: THE CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS (2 Minutes to Remember)

Article 19(1)(a) = The Foundation Stone

ARTICLE 19(1)(a)
   
Right to Free Speech & Expression
   
INCLUDES (but doesn't explicitly say)
   
PRESS FREEDOM

WHY? Because without press, free speech has no reach!

Article 19(2) = The Boundaries

Think of it as “8 EXCEPTIONS” (like 8 Stop Signs):

1.          Sovereignty & Integrity of India

2.          Security of State

3.          Friendly Relations with Foreign States

4.          Public Order

5.          Decency or Morality

6.          Contempt of Court

7.          Defamation

8.          Incitement to Offense

PART 3: LANDMARK CASES - THE “SPINE” OF YOUR ANSWER

Use This Simple Chart:

Year

Case Name

Main Idea

Key Quote

1950

Romesh Thappar

Press = Democracy Foundation

“Lay at foundation of all democratic organisations”

1950

Brij Bhushan

No Pre-Censorship Allowed

“Clear & Present Danger Test”

1966

Naresh Mirajkar

Public Scrutiny Checks Arbitrariness

“Trial subject to public gaze…check against judicial vagaries”

1975

Raj Narain

Right to Information is Fundamental

“People have right to know”

1982

S.P. Gupta

Open Government = Constitutional Duty

“Direct emanation from right to know”

1994

R. Rajagopal

Privacy Rights vs Press Freedom

Balance required; no defamation for official acts

2021

Vinod Dua

Critical Speech is Protected

“Right to criticize Government is essential”

PART 4: FIVE MAIN FUNCTIONS OF FREE PRESS

Remember: “WATCH-D”

W = WATCHDOG (Accountability & Transparency)
A = AWARENESS (Public Education & Information)
T = TRANSPARENCY (Right to Know About Government)
C = CHECK (Prevents Abuse of Power)
H = HUMAN RIGHTS (Protects Fundamental Rights)
D = DISSENT (Enables Democratic Criticism)

Function 1: WATCHDOG (2-3 lines)

Cases: Raj Narain, S.P. Gupta, Naresh Mirajkar - Media exposes governmental wrongdoing - Keeps government accountable - “Right to know” flows from Article 19(1)(a) - Public scrutiny = Check on power

Function 2: AWARENESS (1-2 lines)

Case: Romesh Thappar - Enables informed public debate - Necessary for proper functioning of popular government - Without press, democracy cannot function

Function 3: TRANSPARENCY (1-2 lines)

Case: S.P. Gupta - “Open government” = Constitutional principle - Citizens must know how government functions - Essential for protecting rights

Function 4: CHECK (1-2 lines)

Case: Naresh Mirajkar - Media scrutiny deters arbitrary action - Public gaze acts as check against vagaries - Ensures fairness in administration

Function 5: HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTOR (1-2 lines)

Case: Vinod Dua - Enables dissent and criticism of government - Allows vulnerable groups to raise grievances - Prevents authoritarianism

Function 6: DISSENT ENABLER (1-2 lines)

Case: Vinod Dua - Core of free press = freedom of political opinion - Right to criticize government = essential to democracy - Only through debate can orderly change occur

PART 5: THE BALANCING ACT (Know This Well!)

Press Freedom ≠ Absolute Freedom

Remember: “PFB” Model

P = PRESS FREEDOM (Article 19(1)(a))
         ↓ (MUST BALANCE WITH)
F = FAIR TRIAL & PRIVACY (Article 21)
         ↓ (USING)
B = BALANCING TEST (Proportionality)

Key Cases for Balancing:

1. R. Rajagopal (Privacy) - Privacy = Fundamental Right (Article 21) - Press can publish on public interest matters - BUT cannot invade privacy without justification - Public officials: Cannot sue for reporting official acts unless PROVEN FALSE

2. Media Trials - Press can report on court proceedings - BUT cannot conduct trial-by-media - Cannot prejudge guilt - Cannot violate presumption of innocence (Article 21) - Court has issued guidelines to prevent this

The Balancing Formula (Proportionality Test):

IS RESTRICTION NECESSARY?
        ↓ YES
IS IT PROPORTIONATE?
        ↓ YES
DOES IT SERVE LEGITIMATE STATE OBJECTIVE?
        ↓ YES
DOES IT OUTWEIGH PUBLIC INTEREST IN FREE PRESS?
        ↓ ONLY IF ALL YES
→ THEN RESTRICTION IS JUSTIFIED

PART 6: EXAMINATION ANSWER TEMPLATE (15 Marks)

WRITE IN THIS EXACT FORMAT:

INTRODUCTION (2 minutes writing = 2 marks)

“Free press is indispensable to democracy and human rights protection. Article 19(1)(a) guarantees press freedom. The Indian Supreme Court treats press as the fourth pillar of democracy. This answer examines how media promotes human rights through accountability, transparency, and democratic dissent.”

SECTION 1: CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS (2.5 marks)

             Article 19(1)(a) = Foundation

             Romesh Thappar: “Foundation of all democratic organisations”

             Brij Bhushan: No pre-censorship (Clear & Present Danger)

             Limitations under Article 19(2)

SECTION 2: WATCHDOG FUNCTION (3 marks)

             Raj Narain: Right to know = Fundamental Right

             S.P. Gupta: Open Government = Constitutional Duty

             Naresh Mirajkar: Public scrutiny = Check against arbitrary action

             Creates accountability and prevents abuse

SECTION 3: DEMOCRATIC DISSENT (3 marks)

             Vinod Dua: Critical speech is protected

             “Core of free press = freedom of political opinion”

             Right to criticize government = essential

             Enables orderly democratic change

             Protects vulnerable groups

SECTION 4: BALANCING WITH OTHER RIGHTS (2.5 marks)

             R. Rajagopal: Privacy rights exist

             Media trials violate fair trial rights

             Proportionality test applies

             Public officials cannot sue for official act reporting unless false

CONCLUSION (1 mark)

“Supreme Court has established that free press is structural necessity for democracy and human rights. It functions as watchdog, enabler of dissent, and protector of rights. When balanced properly with other rights, press freedom strengthens democratic governance.”

PART 9: 5-MINUTE MEMORIZATION DRILL

Read this aloud 3 times:

“Press is the fourth pillar of democracy. It derives power from Article 19(1)(a). Romesh Thappar says it’s the foundation. Raj Narain gives us the right to know. S.P. Gupta makes government transparent. Naresh Mirajkar shows how scrutiny checks arbitrariness. R. Rajagopal teaches balancing with privacy. Vinod Dua protects critical dissent. Media functions as watchdog, educator, transparency provider, check on power, and human rights protector. When balanced with Article 21 rights, free press strengthens democracy.”

PART 10: FLASHCARD FORMAT (Study These)

CARD 1: CONSTITUTIONAL FOUNDATION

Q: What is the constitutional basis of press freedom? A: Article 19(1)(a) - Right to free speech & expression. Press freedom is an integral component. Romesh Thappar (1950) established it’s foundational to democracy.

CARD 2: RIGHT TO KNOW

Q: What is the right to information? A: Established in Raj Narain (1975). Citizens have fundamental right to know about governmental functioning. S.P. Gupta (1982) called it “direct emanation from right to know.”

CARD 3: WATCHDOG FUNCTION

Q: How does media act as watchdog? A: Naresh Mirajkar (1966) - Public scrutiny is a check against arbitrary action. Creates accountability and deters misconduct.

CARD 4: DISSENT PROTECTION

Q: Can journalists criticize government? A: YES. Vinod Dua (2021) - “Core of free press is freedom of political opinion. Right to criticize government is essential to democracy.”

CARD 5: BALANCING

Q: Can press invade privacy? A: NO. R. Rajagopal (1994) - Privacy is fundamental right. Press cannot invade privacy without justification. Proportionality test applies.

PART 12: LAST-MINUTE MEMORY AIDS

Remember These Phrases:

1.          “Foundation of democracy” → Romesh Thappar

2.          “Clear and present danger” → Brij Bhushan

3.          “Right to know” → Raj Narain & S.P. Gupta

4.          “Public scrutiny checks arbitrariness” → Naresh Mirajkar

5.          “Open government” → S.P. Gupta

6.          “Privacy vs Press Balance” → R. Rajagopal

7.          “Right to criticize government” → Vinod Dua

8.          “Fourth pillar of democracy” → General principle

The 7-Case:

             Romesh Thappar

             Brij Bhushan

             Naresh Mirajkar

             Raj Narain

             S.P. Gupta

             Rajagopal

             Vinod Dua

PART 13: EXAMINER’S EXPECTATIONS AT LLM LEVEL

What Examiners Look For:

Constitutional Analysis - Show understanding of Article 19(1)(a) and 19(2) ✓ Case Knowledge - Know at least 5 landmark cases with their holdings ✓ Functional Understanding - Explain HOW press promotes rights (not just that it does) ✓ Balancing Ability - Show sophisticated understanding of limitations ✓ Human Rights Lens - Always connect to fundamental rights protection ✓ Legal Reasoning - Don’t just list cases; analyze their significance ✓ Contemporary Relevance - Reference recent judgments (Vinod Dua, Wikimedia cases)

Remember: Press Freedom = Democracy + Human Rights Protection


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