
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.1681514
The Constitution nowhere does not define the terms 'minority,' nor does it lay down sufficient indicia to the test for determination of a group as minority. Confronted, perhaps, with the fact that the concept of minority, laid its problem, was intercalate, the framers made no efforts to bring it within the confines of a formulation. Even in the face of doubts being expressed over the advisability of leaving vague justifiable rights to undefined minorities, the members of the Constituent Assembly made no attempt to define the term while article 23 of the Draft Constitution, corresponding to present articles 29 and 30, was being debated and presumably left it to the wisdom of the courts to supply the omission.
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