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Answer: economic
Municipality constitution criteria: (a) Article 243Q (74th Amendment): Provides that Municipalities shall be constituted in every State based on: (i) Population: Size of population in area, (ii) Density: Population density indicating urban character, (iii) Employment: Percentage of population employed in non-agricultural activities, (iv) Revenue generation: Economic activity, tax base of area, (v) Economic importance: Role of area in regional, State economy (industrial hubs, commercial centers), (b) Applications: (i) Urban classification: Areas meeting criteria constituted as Nagar Panchayat, Municipal Council, or Municipal Corporation based on scale, (ii) Flexibility: State Legislatures may consider additional local factors (geography, infrastructure) in constituting Municipalities, (iii) Upgradation: Areas developing economically may be upgraded from Nagar Panchayat to Municipal Council as they urbanize, (c) Challenges: (i) Criteria application: Population alone may not reflect urban complexity; economic activity, infrastructure needs also relevant, (ii) Timely constitution: Ensuring emerging urban areas constituted as Municipalities promptly for effective governance, (iii) Resource allocation: New Municipalities need adequate resources, capacity for service delivery, (d) Illustrates adaptive urban governance: Article 243Q provides flexible, multi-dimensional criteria for constituting Municipalities; enables appropriate governance structures based on urban scale, economic importance.
Answer: True
Panchayat election disputes: (a) Article 243O (73rd Amendment): Bar on interference by courts in electoral matters of Panchayats: (i) No election to Panchayat shall be called in question except by election petition, (ii) Election petition to be presented to such authority, in such manner as provided by State Legislature law, (b) Rationale: (i) Expedite resolution: Specialized election tribunals can resolve disputes faster than regular courts, (ii) Finality: Ensure electoral process not delayed by prolonged litigation, (iii) State autonomy: Allow States to design appropriate dispute resolution mechanisms for local elections, (c) Applications: (i) Election petitions: Disputes about candidate eligibility, voting irregularities, result declaration resolved through State election petition process, (ii) Judicial review limits: High Courts/Supreme Court cannot entertain writ petitions challenging Panchayat elections; must use election petition route, (d) Challenges: (i) Access to justice: Election petition process may be less accessible than writ jurisdiction for marginalized groups, (ii) Delays: State election petition mechanisms may also face delays, backlog, (iii) Oversight: Limited judicial oversight may reduce accountability for electoral malpractices, (e) Illustrates calibrated judicial review: Article 243O balances need for speedy election dispute resolution with access to justice; specialized mechanisms for local elections while preserving constitutional remedies for fundamental rights violations.
Answer: Direct appointment of political party agents as election officials
SVEEP programme activities: (a) SVEEP launched by ECI in 2009: Multi-pronged strategy to educate voters, build awareness about electoral process, encourage participation, (b) Typical activities: (i) Voter awareness campaigns: In schools, colleges, communities to educate about voting rights, procedures, (ii) Media outreach: TV, radio, social media campaigns to reach diverse audiences, (iii) Civil society collaboration: Partner with NGOs, community organizations for grassroots outreach, especially to marginalized groups, (iv) Targeted initiatives: Focus on women, youth, first-time voters, persons with disabilities, (c) NOT activity: Direct appointment of political party agents as election officials - ECI maintains strict neutrality; election officials appointed based on merit, training, not political affiliation, (d) Applications: (i) Increased turnout: SVEEP contributed to higher voter turnout, especially among women, youth, marginalized groups, (ii) Informed voting: Voters better informed about candidates, issues, electoral procedures, (iii) Inclusive participation: Special efforts to enroll, educate marginalized groups (migrants, homeless, disabled), (e) Illustrates democratic deepening: SVEEP operationalizes ECI's role beyond election conduct to voter education, participation; inclusive outreach strengthens democratic culture, informed citizenship.
Answer: larger
Municipality types under 74th Amendment: (a) Article 243P (74th Amendment): Defines three types of Municipalities based on population, area, economic importance, other factors: (i) Nagar Panchayat: For transitional areas (rural to urban), population typically 10,000-25,000, (ii) Municipal Council: For smaller urban areas, population typically 25,000-1,00,000, (iii) Municipal Corporation: For larger urban areas, population typically above 1,00,000, (b) Applications: (i) Governance structure: Different types have different powers, responsibilities based on urban complexity, (ii) Resource allocation: Larger Municipal Corporations receive more resources, functions due to scale, complexity of urban challenges, (iii) Flexibility: State Legislatures may classify areas based on local conditions, not just population thresholds, (c) Challenges: (i) Classification criteria: Population alone may not reflect urban complexity; economic activity, infrastructure needs also relevant, (ii) Upgradation: Transitional areas may need timely upgradation from Nagar Panchayat to Municipal Council as they urbanize, (iii) Capacity: Larger Municipal Corporations need greater administrative, technical capacity for complex urban governance, (d) Illustrates adaptive urban governance: Article 243P provides flexible framework for classifying urban areas; classification enables appropriate governance structures, resource allocation based on urban scale, complexity.
Answer: nominated
Cantonment Boards under Article 243ZC: (a) Article 243ZC (74th Amendment): Provides for constitution of Cantonment Boards by Parliament by law to administer civic services in cantonment areas (military stations), (b) Composition: Combination of elected and nominated members: (i) Elected members: Represent civilian population in cantonment area, (ii) Nominated members: Represent military authorities, ensuring coordination between civilian, military administration, (c) Functions: (i) Civic services: Water supply, sanitation, public health, roads, street lighting in cantonment areas, (ii) Coordination: Ensure civilian needs met while respecting military requirements, (iii) Planning: Prepare plans for civic infrastructure, welfare schemes in cantonment areas, (d) Applications: (i) Cantonment governance: Boards manage civic services in military stations, balancing civilian, military interests, (ii) Service delivery: Ensure civilian population in cantonments receives essential services (water, sanitation, health), (iii) Coordination mechanisms: Regular consultation between elected, nominated members for effective governance, (e) Challenges: (i) Dual authority: Balancing civilian elected representatives with military nominated members may create tensions, (ii) Resource allocation: Ensuring adequate funds for civic services in cantonments, (iii) Accountability: Ensuring transparency, public participation in Cantonment Board decisions, (f) Illustrates specialized local governance: Article 243ZC provides framework for civic administration in unique military-civilian interface areas; combination of elected, nominated members ensures both civilian representation, military coordination.
Answer: 5
State Finance Commission for Municipalities: (a) Article 243-Y (74th Amendment): Mandates State Finance Commission (SFC) to be constituted every 5 years by Governor to review financial position of Municipalities, (b) Functions: (i) Review financial position: Assess Municipality revenues, expenditures, fiscal capacity, (ii) Recommend principles: For distribution of net proceeds of taxes, duties, tolls, fees between State and Municipalities, (iii) Grants-in-aid: Recommend grants to Municipalities from State Consolidated Fund based on needs, performance, (iv) Measures to improve: Suggest steps to improve Municipality financial management, revenue collection, (c) Applications: (i) Devolution: SFC recommendations guide State in devolving functions, funds, functionaries to Municipalities, (ii) Resource allocation: Ensures Municipalities receive adequate resources for constitutional functions (urban planning, service delivery), (iii) Accountability: SFC reports submitted to Governor, laid before State Legislature; PAC examines implementation, (d) Challenges: (i) Timely constitution: Many States delay constituting SFCs, affecting Municipality planning, budgeting, (ii) Implementation: State governments may not fully implement SFC recommendations, limiting Municipality fiscal autonomy, (iii) Capacity: SFCs need expertise in public finance, urban governance to make informed recommendations, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism: SFC institutionalizes regular review of Municipality finances; independent Commission ensures objective, needs-based resource allocation for urban governance.
Answer: Chief Justice of India
NHRC composition and appointment: (a) Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993 (amended 2019): Specifies NHRC composition, appointment process, (b) Composition: (i) Chairperson: Must be retired Chief Justice of India, (ii) Members: (a) One serving/retired Supreme Court Judge, (b) One serving/retired High Court Chief Justice, (c) Two persons with human rights expertise (at least one woman), (iii) Ex-officio members: Chairpersons of National Commissions for Minorities, SCs, STs, Women, (c) Appointment process: Appointed by President on recommendation of committee: (i) Prime Minister (Chairperson), (ii) Speaker of Lok Sabha, (iii) Home Minister, (iv) Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha/Rajya Sabha, (v) Deputy Chairman of Rajya Sabha, (d) Independence safeguards: (i) Fixed tenure (3 years or until age 70), (ii) Removal only by President on grounds of misbehaviour/incapacity after Supreme Court inquiry, (iii) Salary/status equivalent to constitutional functionaries, (e) Applications: (i) Inquiry powers: NHRC investigates human rights violations, recommends compensation, prosecution, policy changes, (ii) Advisory role: NHRC advises government on human rights policy, legislation, international obligations, (f) Illustrates institutional design: Judicial leadership, multi-member composition, independent appointment process protect NHRC independence for effective human rights protection.
Answer: 5
State Finance Commission for Panchayats: (a) Article 243-I (73rd Amendment): Mandates State Finance Commission (SFC) to be constituted every 5 years by Governor to review financial position of Panchayats, (b) Functions: (i) Review financial position: Assess Panchayat revenues, expenditures, fiscal capacity, (ii) Recommend principles: For distribution of net proceeds of taxes, duties, tolls, fees between State and Panchayats, (iii) Grants-in-aid: Recommend grants to Panchayats from State Consolidated Fund based on needs, performance, (iv) Measures to improve: Suggest steps to improve Panchayat financial management, revenue collection, (c) Applications: (i) Devolution: SFC recommendations guide State in devolving functions, funds, functionaries to Panchayats, (ii) Resource allocation: Ensures Panchayats receive adequate resources for constitutional functions (economic development, social justice), (iii) Accountability: SFC reports submitted to Governor, laid before State Legislature; PAC examines implementation, (d) Challenges: (i) Timely constitution: Many States delay constituting SFCs, affecting Panchayat planning, budgeting, (ii) Implementation: State governments may not fully implement SFC recommendations, limiting Panchayat fiscal autonomy, (iii) Capacity: SFCs need expertise in public finance, local governance to make informed recommendations, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism: SFC institutionalizes regular review of Panchayat finances; independent Commission ensures objective, needs-based resource allocation for grassroots governance.
Answer: True
State Election Commission independence: (a) Constitutional basis: Article 243K (Panchayats), 243ZA (Municipalities) - State Election Commission (SEC) conducts elections to local bodies, (b) Removal procedure: SEC can be removed only in like manner and on like grounds as a Judge of High Court (i.e., Presidential order after Parliament address with special majority on grounds of proved misbehaviour/incapacity), (c) Other safeguards: (i) Fixed tenure (as determined by State Legislature, typically 5 years), (ii) Conditions of service cannot be varied to disadvantage after appointment, (iii) Expenses charged on State Consolidated Fund (not subject to annual vote), (d) Functions: (i) Conduct elections to Panchayats, Municipalities, (ii) Prepare electoral rolls, delimit constituencies for local bodies, (iii) Enforce Model Code of Conduct for local elections, (e) Applications: (i) Local elections: SEC ensures free/fair elections to Panchayats, Municipalities, independent of State executive, (ii) Voter confidence: Independence safeguards enhance credibility of local elections, citizen trust in local governance, (f) Illustrates institutional design: Constitutional safeguards enable SEC to function as neutral arbiter of local elections, insulating electoral process from State political interference.
Answer: State
Municipal financial powers: (a) Article 243X (74th Amendment): Empowers State Legislatures to: (i) Authorize Municipalities to levy, collect, appropriate taxes, duties, tolls, fees (e.g., property tax, profession tax, advertisement fees), (ii) Assign/relinquish State revenues to Municipalities for specific purposes (e.g., share of stamp duty, entertainment tax), (iii) Provide grants-in-aid to Municipalities from State Consolidated Fund, (b) Applications: (i) Own revenue: Municipalities levy property tax, profession tax, fees for local infrastructure, services, (ii) Assigned revenues: State assigns share of stamp duty, entertainment tax to Municipalities for specific functions (roads, water, sanitation), (iii) Grants-in-aid: State provides grants for welfare schemes, capacity building, infrastructure development, (c) Challenges: (i) Limited tax base: Urban areas have higher property values but collection efficiency varies; informal economy limits tax base, (ii) Collection capacity: Municipalities lack staff, systems for efficient tax collection, enforcement, (iii) Dependence: Municipalities heavily dependent on State grants, limiting fiscal autonomy, (d) Illustrates fiscal federalism: Article 243X provides framework for Municipal finances; effective devolution requires political will, capacity building, adequate revenue sources for urban self-governance.
Answer: True
Women's reservation in Municipalities: (a) 74th Amendment (1992): Article 243T mandates reservation for women in Municipalities: (i) Not less than one-third (33%) of total seats at all levels (ward, municipality, corporation), (ii) One-third of seats reserved for SC/ST also reserved for women from those categories, (iii) Rotation: Reserved seats rotated after each election to ensure broad participation, (b) Applications: (i) Women's participation: Significant increase in women elected to Municipalities; increased political participation, leadership development, (ii) Policy impact: Women representatives prioritize water, sanitation, education, health, street lighting; different governance priorities, (iii) Empowerment: Political participation builds confidence, skills, social status for urban women, (c) Challenges: (i) Proxy leadership: Male relatives may exercise power on behalf of women representatives, limiting independent voice, (ii) Capacity building: Training needed for women representatives on urban governance, financial management, legal procedures, (iii) Social barriers: Patriarchal norms may limit women's effective participation, voice in Municipalities, (d) Illustrates transformative urban federalism: Constitutional amendment operationalizes gender justice in urban local governance; reservation enables women's political participation, influencing municipal priorities.
Answer: Universal adult suffrage for citizens aged 18+
Electoral roll preparation principles: (a) Article 325: No person ineligible for inclusion in electoral rolls on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, or any of them - ensures non-discrimination in voter registration, (b) Article 326: Elections to Lok Sabha, State Assemblies on basis of universal adult suffrage: Every citizen aged 18+ years not disqualified under Constitution/law on grounds of non-residence, unsound mind, crime, corrupt/illegal practice, entitled to be registered as voter, (c) Applications: (i) Voter registration: ECI conducts periodic revision of electoral rolls, ensures all eligible citizens enrolled, (ii) Non-discrimination: No separate electorates based on religion, caste; single electoral roll for all citizens in constituency, (iii) Inclusion: Special efforts to enroll marginalized groups (migrants, homeless, disabled) through awareness campaigns, assistance, (d) Challenges: (i) Migration: Ensuring migrants enrolled in current residence, deleted from previous rolls, (ii) Documentation: Poor citizens may lack documents for registration; ECI provides alternative verification, (iii) Awareness: Marginalized groups may not know registration procedures; ECI, civil society conduct awareness campaigns, (e) Illustrates democratic inclusion: Constitutional principles ensure electoral rolls reflect universal adult suffrage, non-discrimination; ECI operationalizes these principles through inclusive registration practices.
Answer: State
Panchayat financial powers: (a) Article 243H (73rd Amendment): Empowers State Legislatures to: (i) Authorize Panchayats to levy, collect, appropriate taxes, duties, tolls, fees (e.g., property tax, market fees, tolls), (ii) Assign/relinquish State revenues to Panchayats for specific purposes (e.g., share of land revenue, stamp duty), (iii) Provide grants-in-aid to Panchayats from State Consolidated Fund, (b) Applications: (i) Own revenue: Panchayats levy property tax, market fees, tolls for local infrastructure, services, (ii) Assigned revenues: State assigns share of land revenue, stamp duty to Panchayats for specific functions (roads, water, sanitation), (iii) Grants-in-aid: State provides grants for welfare schemes, capacity building, infrastructure development, (c) Challenges: (i) Limited tax base: Rural areas have low property values, economic activity, limiting Panchayat own revenue, (ii) Collection capacity: Panchayats lack staff, systems for efficient tax collection, enforcement, (iii) Dependence: Panchayats heavily dependent on State grants, limiting fiscal autonomy, (d) Illustrates fiscal federalism: Article 243H provides framework for Panchayat finances; effective devolution requires political will, capacity building, adequate revenue sources for local self-governance.
Answer: True
SC/ST reservation in Panchayats: (a) 73rd Amendment (1992): Article 243D mandates reservation for SC/ST in Panchayats: (i) Proportionate to population: Seats reserved for SC/ST in proportion to their population in Panchayat area, (ii) Rotation: Reserved seats rotated after each election to ensure broad participation, (iii) Women within SC/ST: One-third of SC/ST reserved seats also reserved for women from those categories, (b) Applications: (i) Political representation: SC/ST members elected to Panchayats in proportion to population; increased political participation of marginalized groups, (ii) Policy impact: SC/ST representatives prioritize issues affecting their communities (land rights, education, healthcare, anti-discrimination), (iii) Empowerment: Political participation builds confidence, leadership skills, social status for SC/ST communities, (c) Challenges: (i) Proxy leadership: Dominant caste members may influence SC/ST representatives, limiting independent voice, (ii) Capacity building: Training needed for SC/ST representatives on governance, legal procedures, advocacy, (iii) Social barriers: Caste discrimination may limit effective participation, voice of SC/ST representatives in Panchayats, (d) Illustrates transformative federalism: Constitutional amendment operationalizes social justice at grassroots; reservation enables political representation of marginalized groups, influencing local governance priorities.
Answer: four-fifths
District Planning Committee (DPC): (a) Article 243ZD (74th Amendment): Mandates DPC in every district to consolidate plans from Panchayats, Municipalities, prepare draft development plan for district, (b) Composition: (i) At least four-fifths (4/5) of members elected from among elected representatives of Panchayats, Municipalities in district, (ii) Remaining members nominated for expertise in planning, development, (iii) Chairperson: Elected from among members (often District Panchayat President or Mayor), (c) Functions: (i) Consolidate plans: Integrate rural (Panchayat), urban (Municipality) plans for coherent district development, (ii) Prepare draft plan: Prioritize infrastructure, welfare schemes based on district needs, resources, (iii) Forward to State: Submit draft plan to State government for inclusion in State plan, (d) Applications: (i) Integrated planning: DPC ensures rural-urban linkages (e.g., water supply, transport, waste management), (ii) Resource allocation: Prioritizes schemes based on district-level data, needs assessment, (iii) Coordination: Facilitates coordination among Panchayats, Municipalities, line departments, (e) Challenges: (i) Implementation: Many States have not fully constituted DPCs or empowered them with functions, funds, (ii) Capacity: DPC members need training on planning, financial management, inter-governmental coordination, (f) Illustrates integrated federalism: DPC operationalizes rural-urban planning coordination; constitutional mandate enables holistic district development through participatory, evidence-based planning.
Answer: social
Article 243W Municipal powers: (a) 74th Amendment (1992): Article 243W empowers State Legislatures to endow Municipalities with powers/authority to function as institutions of self-government, (b) Functional domains: (i) Prepare plans for economic development, (ii) Implement schemes for social justice (welfare of marginalized groups, affirmative action implementation), (iii) 18 subjects in 12th Schedule: Urban planning, regulation of land-use, slum improvement, water supply, public health, sanitation, fire services, urban forestry, roads, street lighting, etc., (c) Applications: (i) Urban development: Municipalities prepare city development plans, prioritize infrastructure (water, sanitation, transport), (ii) Social justice: Implement welfare schemes for urban poor, SC/ST, women, disabled; slum rehabilitation, affordable housing, (iii) Service delivery: Municipalities manage water supply, waste management, public health at local level, (d) Challenges: (i) Incomplete devolution: Many States have not fully devolved functions, funds, functionaries to Municipalities, (ii) Financial constraints: Municipalities depend on State grants, limited own revenue sources, (iii) Capacity gaps: Municipal staff need training on urban planning, financial management, governance, (e) Illustrates urban federalism: Article 243W provides constitutional framework for local self-governance in urban areas; effective devolution requires political will, capacity building, financial resources.
Answer: True
Gram Sabha powers under 73rd Amendment: (a) Constitutional basis: Article 243A mandates Gram Sabha (village assembly of all adult members) as foundation of Panchayati Raj, (b) Powers/functions: (i) Approve Panchayat plans, programs, budgets for economic development, social justice, (ii) Select beneficiaries for welfare schemes (MGNREGA, PMAY, NFSA) through public verification, (iii) Social audit: Verify muster rolls, expenditure, implementation of schemes, (iv) Mobilize voluntary labor, contributions for community works, (c) Applications: (i) MGNREGA: Gram Sabha approves shelf of projects, selects beneficiaries, conducts social audit, (ii) Local planning: Gram Sabha identifies priorities (water, roads, sanitation) for Panchayat plans, (iii) Accountability: Public verification reduces corruption, ensures schemes reach intended beneficiaries, (d) Challenges: (i) Participation: Ensuring inclusive participation of women, SC/ST, marginalized groups in Gram Sabha, (ii) Capacity: Gram Sabha members need awareness, training on planning, financial management, (iii) Follow-up: Ensuring Gram Sabha decisions implemented by Panchayat, officials, (e) Illustrates participatory federalism: Gram Sabha operationalizes grassroots democracy; constitutional mandate enables citizen participation in planning, implementation, accountability at village level.
Answer: social
Article 243G Panchayat powers: (a) 73rd Amendment (1992): Article 243G empowers State Legislatures to endow Panchayats with powers/authority to function as institutions of self-government, (b) Functional domains: (i) Prepare plans for economic development, (ii) Implement schemes for social justice (welfare of marginalized groups, affirmative action implementation), (iii) 29 subjects in 11th Schedule: Agriculture, land improvement, minor irrigation, rural housing, drinking water, roads, rural electrification, poverty alleviation, education, health, women/child development, social welfare, etc., (c) Applications: (i) MGNREGA: Panchayats play key role in planning, implementation, social audit of rural employment scheme, (ii) Local development: Panchayats prepare village plans, prioritize infrastructure, welfare schemes based on local needs, (iii) Social justice: Implement reservation benefits, welfare schemes for SC/ST, women, disabled at grassroots, (d) Challenges: (i) Incomplete devolution: Many States have not fully devolved functions, funds, functionaries to Panchayats, (ii) Capacity gaps: Panchayat members need training on planning, financial management, governance, (iii) Political interference: State governments may undermine Panchayat autonomy through administrative control, (e) Illustrates grassroots federalism: Article 243G provides constitutional framework for local self-governance; effective devolution requires political will, capacity building, financial resources.
Answer: True
Vertical devolution trend: (a) 14th Finance Commission (2015-20): Recommended 42% vertical devolution to States (highest ever), reflecting cooperative federalism, (b) 15th Finance Commission (2020-25): Recommended 41% vertical devolution, reduction primarily due to: (i) Creation of new Union Territories: J&K, Ladakh (previously part of State share), (ii) Changed criteria weights: Demographic performance, tax effort added; population weights adjusted, (c) Rationale for 41%: (i) Maintain fiscal space for Union: National security, infrastructure, welfare schemes with national footprint, (ii) Balance with State needs: 41% still substantial devolution enabling State autonomy in expenditure, (d) Applications: (i) State budgets: 41% devolution forms significant revenue source for States, especially those with low own tax capacity, (ii) Fiscal planning: States plan expenditures based on predictable FC devolution, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism evolution: Technical criteria mediating political claims; FC balances Union fiscal space with State autonomy through calibrated devolution.
Answer: one-third
GST Council voting mechanism: (a) Article 279A(9): GST Council decisions by 3/4 majority of weighted votes: (i) Union Government: 1/3 vote weight, (ii) All State Governments collectively: 2/3 vote weight, (b) Rationale: Ensures neither Union nor States can dominate; requires consensus on GST rates, exemptions, thresholds, (c) Applications: (i) Rate rationalization: Merging 12%/18% slabs requires consensus-building across States, (ii) Compensation negotiations: Post-2022 continuation debates resolved through Council dialogue, (iii) Compliance simplification: E-invoicing expansion, return filing improvements agreed through Council, (d) Challenges: (i) Union-State disagreements: On revenue impact, compliance burden, rate cuts, (ii) Data sharing: For enforcement, fraud detection, requires trust, coordination, (iii) Political dynamics: Coalition politics, electoral cycles affect Council decisions, (e) Illustrates cooperative fiscal federalism: Shared sovereignty in indirect taxation for 'One Nation, One Tax'; weighted voting enables consensus while respecting State autonomy.