The Supreme Court ruled recently that 바카라there is no fundamental right which inheres in an individual to claim reservation in promotion바카라, and that 바카라no mandamus can be issued by the court directing the state government to provide reservations바카라. So, have reservations been interpreted in the spirit of Articles 14,15 and 16(4)바카라the last specifically dealing with the right to equality of opportunity in employment? How have entitlements as justiciable fundamental rights and non-justiciable directive principles been interpreted juridically over the years? Can directive principles impose an obligation on the State to realise the citizen바카라s entitlements, thus giving the Constitution, as Babasaheb Ambedkar held, a transformative potential? Are fundamental rights discretionary, as this Supreme Court verdict suggests, and hence the State has no obligations? Underlying the verdict are ideas of 바카라merit바카라 and 바카라efficiency바카라, a social debate finding interpretations in varied juridical pronouncements going back to the 1960s, and which gained strength in the discourse around anti-Mandal Commission agitations. It pits individual mobility against class entitlements (of scheduled castes, in this case) and the State바카라s need to identity 바카라legitimate claimants바카라. The verdict also said there is no justiciable right or constitutional duty to provide reservations, thereby reducing substantial equality to formal equality against the spirit of the Constitution.