National Security and Strategic Interests क्या है?
ऐतिहासिक पृष्ठभूमि
मुख्य प्रावधान
8 points- 1.
National Security is a recognized ground for imposing reasonable restrictions on fundamental rights, including the Right to Freedom of Speech and Expression (Article 19(2)) and the Right to Information (Section 8(1)(a) of RTI Act).
- 2.
It involves protecting against threats such as terrorism, espionage, cyber warfare, external aggression, and activities that undermine the sovereignty and integrity of India.
- 3.
Strategic Interests often relate to defense capabilities, foreign policy decisions, intelligence operations, critical infrastructure protection, and economic stability.
- 4.
The government has the power to classify information as secret to protect national security and strategic interests, as outlined in various laws and executive orders.
- 5.
Balancing national security with individual liberties and transparency is a constant challenge in democratic governance.
- 6.
Misuse of 'national security' as a blanket justification can lead to opacity and abuse of power.
- 7.
Judicial review plays a role in scrutinizing whether restrictions imposed in the name of national security are truly 'reasonable' and proportionate.
- 8.
The Official Secrets Act, 1923, is a primary legislation dealing with classified information related to national security.
दृश्य सामग्री
National Security & Strategic Interests: Balancing State Needs with Rights
This mind map explores the concept of National Security and Strategic Interests as grounds for restricting rights, highlighting its definition, legal basis, areas of application, and the inherent conflict with transparency.
National Security & Strategic Interests
- ●Definition
- ●Legal Justifications for Restriction
- ●Areas of Application
- ●Conflict with Rights & Transparency
हालिया विकास
5 विकासIncreased focus on cyber security and data protection as critical components of national security.
Debates around surveillance technologies and their impact on privacy in the name of national security.
The current news indicates that the government is using 'security, strategic, scientific, or economic interests of the State' as justification for exempting information from the RTI Act, highlighting the ongoing tension between state interests and transparency.
International relations and geopolitical shifts constantly redefine strategic interests.
Supreme Court has, in recent judgments, emphasized the need for the state to justify claims of national security with concrete evidence.
