Indian Polity & Governance·Amendments
Citizenship — Amendments
Constitution VerifiedUPSC Verified
Version 1Updated 5 Mar 2026
| Amendment | Year | Description | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st Amendment | 1951 | Though primarily about fundamental rights, it indirectly affected citizenship by restricting freedom of speech and expression, which impacts citizen participation in democracy. | Established precedent for reasonable restrictions on fundamental rights available to citizens |
| Citizenship Act Amendment | 1986 | Modified Section 3 of Citizenship Act to require at least one parent to be Indian citizen for citizenship by birth, moving away from pure jus soli principle. | Addressed illegal immigration concerns while maintaining inclusive approach to citizenship acquisition |
| Citizenship Act Amendment | 2003 | Further tightened citizenship by birth provisions, requiring one parent to be citizen and other not to be illegal migrant. | Strengthened border security and immigration control while balancing humanitarian concerns |
| Citizenship Amendment Act | 2019 | Provided fast-track citizenship to Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi, and Christian minorities from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh who entered before December 31, 2014. | Sparked nationwide debates about religious criteria in citizenship laws and constitutional secularism |