“We the People”: How the Constituent Assembly acquired the authority to frame the Constitution
The authority of the Indian Constitution was not divinely ordained or violently seized, but legally transferred and morally grounded in the will of the people.
Mohan V Katarki
Published on: 9 December 2025, 02:37 pm

IN AN ERA where nations grapple with questions of governance, identity, and international obligations, it becomes imperative to inquire into the source of authority and its legitimacy and legality. This is not merely a question of fact, but it has profound relevance in international law. In international law on the recognition of States, recognition of a new State hinges on the legitimate source of sovereign power. In the Indian context, such an inquiry reveals the robust foundations of the Republic of India, rooted in popular consent and peaceful transfer of power for former sovereigns.
From divine sanction to popular consent as the basis of sovereignty
Historically, the locus of sovereign power has evolved dramatically. In medieval Europe, authority was often ascribed to divinity, as seen in the divine right of kings espoused by thinkers like James I of England. The monarch's will was deemed infallible, deriving from God's mandate, with no room for human contestation. This theocratic model persisted in various forms across empires, including colonial regimes where European powers justified rule over colonies as a civilizing mission ordained by higher powers.
Positivism paved the way for the "will of the people" theory, where sovereignty emanates from collective consent, formalized through constitutions or elections.
The shift began with the Enlightenment and revolutions that emphasized human agency. The American Revolution (1776) and French Revolution (1789) pivoted sovereignty toward the "consent of the governed," as articulated in the U.S. Declaration of Independence and Rousseau's social contract theory. Consent could be acquired through revolution—violent overthrow of tyrants—or peaceful transfer, such as electoral mandates or negotiated handovers. This transition marked the decline of divine legitimacy and the rise of democratic ideals.