Aside from India, the basic structure doctrine has been adopted in a number of jurisdictions, and rejected in some others.
Bangladesh The basic structure doctrine was adopted by the
Supreme Court of Bangladesh in 1989, by expressly relying on the reasoning in the Kesavananda case, in its ruling on
Anwar Hossain Chowdhary v. Bangladesh. However, Bangladesh is the only legal system to introduce this concept through constitutional provisions. Article 7B of the Constitution of Bangladesh introduced some parts of it as basic provisions of the constitution and referred to some others (which are not properly defined) as basic structure of the constitution and declares all of these as not amendable.
Belize The basic structure doctrine was invoked by the
Supreme Court of Judicature of Belize in
Bowen v Attorney General in rejecting the
Belize Constitution (Sixth Amendment) Bill 2008, which had sought to exclude certain deprivation of property rights from judicial review. The court recognised the fundamental rights granted by the constitution, respect for the rule of law and the right to the ownership of private property as basic features of the Belizean constitution, as well as the separation of powers, which
Chief Justice Abdulai Conteh noted had been recognised by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in
Hinds v The Queen (which was not a constitutional amendment case) as implicit in Westminster model constitutions in the Caribbean Commonwealth realm. The Supreme Court affirmed the doctrine in
British Caribbean Bank Ltd v AG Belize and struck down parts of the
Belize Telecommunications (Amendment) Act 2011 and
Belize Constitution (Eighth) Amendment Act 2011. The amendments had sought to preclude the court from deciding on whether deprivation of property by the government was for a public purpose, and to remove any limits on the
National Assembly's power to alter the constitution. This was found to impinge on the separation of powers, which had earlier been identified as part of the basic structure of the Belizean constitution. The Court remarked that the Indian constitution was drafted by a constituent assembly representative of the Indian people in territorial, racial and community terms, and not "ordinary mortals", while the same could not be said for the
Malaysian constitution, which was enacted by an ordinary legislature. The basic structure doctrine was first cited with approval by the Federal Court in
obiter dicta in
Sivarasa Rasiah v. Badan Peguam Malaysia, before ultimately being applied by the same court in ''Semenyih Jaya Sdn Bhd v. Pentadbir Tanah Daerah Hulu Langat & Ano'r Case
and Indira Gandhi a/p Mutho v. Pengarah Jabatan Agama Islam Perak & 2 O'rs & 2 Other Cases''. In those cases, the Federal Court held that the vesting of the judicial power of the Federation in the civil courts formed part of the basic structure of the Constitution, and could not be removed even by constitutional amendment.
Papua New Guinea The
Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea found that the basic structure doctrine was not applicable in Papua New Guinea as part of a 2010 judgment on
an organic law, referring to it as a "foreign doctrine".
Pakistan The basic structure doctrine was recognised in
Constitution Petition No.12 of 2010, etc. by the
Supreme Court of Pakistan in 2015. The case was heard by the full 17-member bench, of which a plurality of 8 accepted the basic structure doctrine as a basis for limiting the ability of the
Parliament of Pakistan to amend the
Constitution, 4 rejected the premise of such limitations, describing the basic structure doctrine as a "vehicle for judicial aggrandisement of power", and 5 accepted that some limitations exist but did not endorse the basic structure doctrine. The judgement identified democracy, federalism and independence of the judiciary as among the characteristics protected by the doctrine.
Uganda In December 2017, the Ugandan parliament passed a Constitutional Amendment which removed the age limit of 75 years for the President and Chairpersons of the Local Council. President Yoweri Museveni, who has been President of Uganda since 1986 and aged 74 at the time of signing, signed the amendment into law in January 2018. Several opposition leaders and the Uganda Law Society, challenged the constitutionality of the amendment before the Constitutional Court, which (majority) upheld the validity of the amendment. Taking note of the judgments in
Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala and
Minerva Mills v. Union of India, the Supreme Court of Uganda in
Mabirizi Kiwanuka & ors. v. Attorney General unanimously upheld the Constitutional Court (majority) finding. ==See also==