Create a custom practice set
Pick category, difficulty, number of questions, and time limit. Start instantly with your own quiz.
Generate QuizPick category, difficulty, number of questions, and time limit. Start instantly with your own quiz.
Generate QuizNo weekly quiz is published yet. Check the weekly page for the latest updates.
View Weekly PageFree practice for SSC, UPSC, Banking & Railway exams. No login required.
Answer: True
Activity Mapping for Municipal empowerment: (a) Concept: Activity Mapping is a tool to operationalize devolution under 74th Amendment by clearly assigning specific activities under 12th Schedule subjects to Municipalities, State departments, or joint responsibility, (b) Rationale: (i) Clarity: Reduces ambiguity about which level responsible for which activity, preventing overlap, gaps, (ii) Accountability: Clear assignment enables accountability for service delivery, resource utilization, (iii) Capacity planning: Identifies capacity needs at each level for effective implementation, (c) Applications: (i) Progressive States: Tamil Nadu, Gujarat have developed comprehensive Activity Maps for 12th Schedule subjects, enabling effective devolution, (ii) Sectoral examples: In water supply, Activity Map may assign local distribution to Municipality, source development to State, quality regulation to higher levels, (iii) Planning: Activity Maps inform Municipality plans, budgets, ensuring alignment with assigned responsibilities, (d) Challenges: (i) Political will: Activity Mapping requires State commitment to devolution; some States resist clear assignment to retain control, (ii) Capacity: Municipalities need resources, training to perform assigned activities effectively, (iii) Coordination: Joint responsibilities require clear coordination mechanisms, avoiding duplication, gaps, (e) Illustrates operational urban federalism: Activity Mapping translates constitutional devolution framework into actionable assignments; enables effective urban governance through clarity, accountability, capacity building.
Answer: True
Activity Mapping for Panchayat empowerment: (a) Concept: Activity Mapping is a tool to operationalize devolution under 73rd Amendment by clearly assigning specific activities under 11th Schedule subjects to Panchayats, State departments, or joint responsibility, (b) Rationale: (i) Clarity: Reduces ambiguity about which level responsible for which activity, preventing overlap, gaps, (ii) Accountability: Clear assignment enables accountability for service delivery, resource utilization, (iii) Capacity planning: Identifies capacity needs at each level for effective implementation, (c) Applications: (i) Progressive States: Kerala, Karnataka have developed comprehensive Activity Maps for 11th Schedule subjects, enabling effective devolution, (ii) Sectoral examples: In health, Activity Map may assign village-level awareness to Panchayat, primary health centers to State, specialist care to higher levels, (iii) Planning: Activity Maps inform Panchayat plans, budgets, ensuring alignment with assigned responsibilities, (d) Challenges: (i) Political will: Activity Mapping requires State commitment to devolution; some States resist clear assignment to retain control, (ii) Capacity: Panchayats need resources, training to perform assigned activities effectively, (iii) Coordination: Joint responsibilities require clear coordination mechanisms, avoiding duplication, gaps, (e) Illustrates operational federalism: Activity Mapping translates constitutional devolution framework into actionable assignments; enables effective local governance through clarity, accountability, capacity building.
Answer: True
Municipality social justice role: (a) Article 243W (74th Amendment): Empowers Municipalities to implement schemes for social justice, (b) Key focus areas: (i) Welfare of SC/ST: Implement reservation benefits, welfare schemes (scholarships, housing, livelihood) for SC/ST communities in urban areas, (ii) Women's empowerment: Implement schemes for women's health, education, economic empowerment; ensure women's participation in Municipal governance, (iii) Disabled welfare: Ensure accessibility, welfare schemes for persons with disabilities in urban settings, (iv) Affirmative action: Implement reservation policies in Municipal employment, service delivery, (c) Applications: (i) Targeted schemes: Municipalities identify beneficiaries, deliver welfare schemes for marginalized urban groups, (ii) Social audit: Municipalities conduct social audit of welfare schemes to ensure benefits reach intended beneficiaries, (iii) Advocacy: Municipalities advocate for marginalized groups' needs in higher-level planning, resource allocation, (d) Challenges: (i) Awareness: Marginalized urban groups may not know about schemes, entitlements; Municipalities need outreach, awareness campaigns, (ii) Capacity: Municipal staff need training on social justice issues, scheme implementation, (iii) Social barriers: Caste, gender discrimination may limit effective implementation of social justice schemes in urban settings, (e) Illustrates transformative urban federalism: Article 243W enables Municipalities to operationalize social justice at urban local level; effective implementation requires capacity building, social mobilization, accountability mechanisms to ensure welfare reaches marginalized urban groups.
Answer: True
Panchayat social justice role: (a) Article 243G (73rd Amendment): Empowers Panchayats to implement schemes for social justice, (b) Key focus areas: (i) Welfare of SC/ST: Implement reservation benefits, welfare schemes (scholarships, housing, livelihood) for SC/ST communities, (ii) Women's empowerment: Implement schemes for women's health, education, economic empowerment; ensure women's participation in Panchayat governance, (iii) Disabled welfare: Ensure accessibility, welfare schemes for persons with disabilities at village level, (iv) Affirmative action: Implement reservation policies in Panchayat employment, service delivery, (c) Applications: (i) Targeted schemes: Panchayats identify beneficiaries, deliver welfare schemes for marginalized groups, (ii) Social audit: Panchayats conduct social audit of welfare schemes to ensure benefits reach intended beneficiaries, (iii) Advocacy: Panchayats advocate for marginalized groups' needs in higher-level planning, resource allocation, (d) Challenges: (i) Awareness: Marginalized groups may not know about schemes, entitlements; Panchayats need outreach, awareness campaigns, (ii) Capacity: Panchayat members, staff need training on social justice issues, scheme implementation, (iii) Social barriers: Caste, gender discrimination may limit effective implementation of social justice schemes, (e) Illustrates transformative federalism: Article 243G enables Panchayats to operationalize social justice at grassroots; effective implementation requires capacity building, social mobilization, accountability mechanisms to ensure welfare reaches marginalized groups.
Answer: True
12th Schedule and functional devolution: (a) 12th Schedule (74th Amendment): Lists 18 functional items that may be devolved to Municipalities: Urban planning, regulation of land-use, slum improvement, water supply, public health, sanitation, fire services, urban forestry, roads, street lighting, etc., (b) Constitutional framework: Article 243W empowers State Legislatures to endow Municipalities with powers/authority for these functions, but does not mandate automatic devolution, (c) Ground reality: Devolution depends on: (i) State legislation: States must enact laws devolving specific functions, funds, functionaries to Municipalities; many States have incomplete legislation, (ii) Political will: State governments may be reluctant to devolve powers, fearing loss of control, political patronage, (iii) Capacity: Municipalities need staff, resources, training to effectively perform devolved functions; capacity gaps limit effective devolution, (d) Applications: (i) Progressive States: Tamil Nadu, Gujarat have substantially devolved 12th Schedule functions to Municipalities, enabling local planning, service delivery, (ii) Lagging States: Many States have minimal devolution; Municipalities remain dependent on State departments for implementation, (iii) Sectoral variation: Some functions (e.g., water supply, waste management) more widely devolved than others (e.g., urban planning, fire services), (e) Illustrates cooperative federalism: 12th Schedule provides menu of functions for urban governance; actual devolution requires State-level legislation, political commitment, capacity building to operationalize constitutional framework.
Answer: True
11th Schedule and functional devolution: (a) 11th Schedule (73rd Amendment): Lists 29 functional items that may be devolved to Panchayats: Agriculture, land improvement, minor irrigation, rural housing, drinking water, roads, rural electrification, poverty alleviation, education, health, women/child development, social welfare, etc., (b) Constitutional framework: Article 243G empowers State Legislatures to endow Panchayats with powers/authority for these functions, but does not mandate automatic devolution, (c) Ground reality: Devolution depends on: (i) State legislation: States must enact laws devolving specific functions, funds, functionaries to Panchayats; many States have incomplete legislation, (ii) Political will: State governments may be reluctant to devolve powers, fearing loss of control, political patronage, (iii) Capacity: Panchayats need staff, resources, training to effectively perform devolved functions; capacity gaps limit effective devolution, (d) Applications: (i) Progressive States: Kerala, Karnataka have substantially devolved 11th Schedule functions to Panchayats, enabling local planning, service delivery, (ii) Lagging States: Many States have minimal devolution; Panchayats remain dependent on State departments for implementation, (iii) Sectoral variation: Some functions (e.g., MGNREGA implementation) more widely devolved than others (e.g., health, education), (e) Illustrates cooperative federalism: 11th Schedule provides menu of functions for local governance; actual devolution requires State-level legislation, political commitment, capacity building to operationalize constitutional framework.
Answer: True
Municipal fiscal autonomy reality: (a) Constitutional framework: Articles 243X (taxation powers), 243-Y (State Finance Commission) provide framework for Municipality finances, (b) Ground reality: Fiscal autonomy depends on: (i) State legislation: States must enact laws authorizing Municipality taxation, assigning revenues, providing grants; many States have incomplete legislation, (ii) Political will: State governments may be reluctant to devolve financial powers, fearing loss of control, political patronage, (iii) Capacity: Municipalities need staff, systems, training for revenue collection, financial management, planning; capacity gaps limit effective use of fiscal powers, (c) Applications: (i) Progressive States: Tamil Nadu, Gujarat have enacted comprehensive Municipality finance laws, devolved significant functions, funds, functionaries, (ii) Lagging States: Many States have minimal devolution; Municipalities remain dependent on State grants, limiting autonomy, (iii) Capacity building: Training programs, technical support help Municipalities improve revenue collection, financial management, (d) Challenges: (i) Revenue generation: Informal economy, property undervaluation limit Municipal own revenue, (ii) Grant dependence: Heavy reliance on State/Central grants limits Municipality flexibility in addressing local priorities, (iii) Accountability: Ensuring transparent, accountable use of Municipal funds requires systems, public engagement, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism gap: Constitutional framework enables Municipality fiscal autonomy; actual autonomy requires State-level legislation, political commitment, capacity building to operationalize constitutional provisions.
Answer: True
Panchayat fiscal autonomy reality: (a) Constitutional framework: Articles 243H (taxation powers), 243-I (State Finance Commission) provide framework for Panchayat finances, (b) Ground reality: Fiscal autonomy depends on: (i) State legislation: States must enact laws authorizing Panchayat taxation, assigning revenues, providing grants; many States have incomplete legislation, (ii) Political will: State governments may be reluctant to devolve financial powers, fearing loss of control, political patronage, (iii) Capacity: Panchayats need staff, systems, training for revenue collection, financial management, planning; capacity gaps limit effective use of fiscal powers, (c) Applications: (i) Progressive States: Kerala, Karnataka have enacted comprehensive Panchayat finance laws, devolved significant functions, funds, functionaries, (ii) Lagging States: Many States have minimal devolution; Panchayats remain dependent on State grants, limiting autonomy, (iii) Capacity building: Training programs, technical support help Panchayats improve revenue collection, financial management, (d) Challenges: (i) Revenue generation: Rural areas have limited tax base; Panchayats struggle to generate adequate own revenue, (ii) Grant dependence: Heavy reliance on State/Central grants limits Panchayat flexibility in addressing local priorities, (iii) Accountability: Ensuring transparent, accountable use of Panchayat funds requires systems, public engagement, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism gap: Constitutional framework enables Panchayat fiscal autonomy; actual autonomy requires State-level legislation, political commitment, capacity building to operationalize constitutional provisions.
Answer: True
Judicial review of Municipal elections: (a) Article 243ZG (74th Amendment): Bar on interference by courts in electoral matters of Municipalities: (i) No election to Municipality 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) Exception for constitutional violations: Bar does not apply to challenges based on violation of Fundamental Rights or other constitutional provisions: (i) Writ jurisdiction: High Courts/Supreme Court can entertain writ petitions (Articles 226, 32) if Municipal elections violate Fundamental Rights (e.g., discrimination, denial of voting rights), (ii) Constitutional remedies: Citizens can challenge electoral malpractices violating constitutional principles through writ jurisdiction, not just election petition route, (c) Applications: (i) Discrimination cases: Courts can intervene if Municipal elections discriminate based on religion, caste, gender in violation of Articles 14, 15, (ii) Voting rights: Courts can protect right to vote (Article 326) if voters illegally denied enrollment, voting opportunity, (iii) Procedural fairness: Courts can ensure electoral process follows constitutional principles of fairness, transparency, (d) Balance: Article 243ZG balances need for speedy election dispute resolution (through election petitions) with protection of constitutional rights (through writ jurisdiction); ensures electoral process not delayed by prolonged litigation while preserving constitutional remedies for rights violations.
Answer: False
Municipal audit provisions: (a) Correction: Article 243Z deals with disqualifications for Municipality membership; audit provisions are in Article 243Z-1, not 243Z, (b) Article 243Z-1 (74th Amendment): (i) Audit requirement: Accounts of Municipalities shall be audited at least once a year, (ii) State Legislature power: State Legislature may make provisions for audit, maintenance of accounts of Municipalities, (iii) Audit authority: Audit may be conducted by State CAG, local fund audit department, or other authorized agency as per State law, (c) Applications: (i) Financial accountability: Annual audit ensures Municipality funds used for intended purposes, detects irregularities, (ii) Transparency: Audit reports laid before Municipality, State Legislature for public scrutiny, (iii) Capacity building: Audit findings inform training, system improvements for Municipality financial management, (d) Challenges: (i) Audit capacity: State audit departments may lack resources to audit all Municipalities annually, (ii) Follow-up: Ensuring audit findings lead to corrective action, recovery of misused funds, (iii) Awareness: Municipality members, citizens need awareness about audit process, rights to access audit reports, (e) Illustrates accountability architecture: Article 243Z-1 institutionalizes financial accountability for Municipalities; effective audit requires capacity, follow-up, public engagement to ensure funds used for urban development.
Answer: False
Panchayat audit provisions: (a) Correction: Article 243E deals with Panchayat term, elections; audit provisions are in Article 243J, not 243E, (b) Article 243J (73rd Amendment): (i) Audit requirement: Accounts of Panchayats shall be audited at least once a year, (ii) State Legislature power: State Legislature may make provisions for audit, maintenance of accounts of Panchayats, (iii) Audit authority: Audit may be conducted by State CAG, local fund audit department, or other authorized agency as per State law, (c) Applications: (i) Financial accountability: Annual audit ensures Panchayat funds used for intended purposes, detects irregularities, (ii) Transparency: Audit reports laid before Gram Sabha, State Legislature for public scrutiny, (iii) Capacity building: Audit findings inform training, system improvements for Panchayat financial management, (d) Challenges: (i) Audit capacity: State audit departments may lack resources to audit all Panchayats annually, (ii) Follow-up: Ensuring audit findings lead to corrective action, recovery of misused funds, (iii) Awareness: Panchayat members, citizens need awareness about audit process, rights to access audit reports, (e) Illustrates accountability architecture: Article 243J institutionalizes financial accountability for Panchayats; effective audit requires capacity, follow-up, public engagement to ensure funds used for local development.
Answer: True
Municipal fiscal reality: (a) Constitutional authorization: Article 243X empowers State Legislatures to authorize Municipalities to levy taxes, duties, tolls, fees, (b) Ground reality: Most Municipalities rely heavily on grants: (i) Limited tax base: Informal economy, property undervaluation, tax evasion limit Municipal own revenue, (ii) Collection capacity: Municipalities lack staff, systems, enforcement mechanisms for efficient tax collection, (iii) Political resistance: Local taxation may face voter, business resistance; Municipal representatives reluctant to levy taxes fearing electoral backlash, (c) Grant dependence: (i) State grants: Assigned revenues, grants-in-aid from State Consolidated Fund form major Municipality revenue, (ii) Central schemes: Funds from Centrally Sponsored Schemes (AMRUT, Smart Cities) supplement Municipality resources, (iii) Conditional grants: Many grants tied to specific schemes, limiting Municipality flexibility in resource allocation, (d) Implications: (i) Fiscal autonomy: Grant dependence limits Municipality autonomy in planning, prioritizing local needs, (ii) Accountability: Less accountability when funds come from higher governments rather than local taxation, (iii) Capacity building: Need for training, systems to enhance Municipality revenue collection, financial management, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism gap: Constitutional framework enables Municipal taxation; ground reality requires capacity building, political will, adequate revenue sources for meaningful fiscal autonomy.
Answer: True
Panchayat fiscal reality: (a) Constitutional authorization: Article 243H empowers State Legislatures to authorize Panchayats to levy taxes, duties, tolls, fees, (b) Ground reality: Most Panchayats rely heavily on grants: (i) Limited tax base: Rural areas have low property values, economic activity, limiting potential revenue from property tax, profession tax, (ii) Collection capacity: Panchayats lack staff, systems, enforcement mechanisms for efficient tax collection, (iii) Political resistance: Local taxation may face voter resistance; Panchayat representatives reluctant to levy taxes fearing electoral backlash, (c) Grant dependence: (i) State grants: Assigned revenues, grants-in-aid from State Consolidated Fund form major Panchayat revenue, (ii) Central schemes: Funds from Centrally Sponsored Schemes (MGNREGA, PMAY) supplement Panchayat resources, (iii) Conditional grants: Many grants tied to specific schemes, limiting Panchayat flexibility in resource allocation, (d) Implications: (i) Fiscal autonomy: Grant dependence limits Panchayat autonomy in planning, prioritizing local needs, (ii) Accountability: Less accountability when funds come from higher governments rather than local taxation, (iii) Capacity building: Need for training, systems to enhance Panchayat revenue collection, financial management, (e) Illustrates fiscal federalism gap: Constitutional framework enables Panchayat taxation; ground reality requires capacity building, political will, adequate revenue sources for meaningful fiscal autonomy.
Answer: True
Reservation rotation in Municipalities: (a) Article 243T (74th Amendment): (i) Reservation for SC/ST: Seats reserved in proportion to population, rotated after each election to different constituencies, (ii) Reservation for women: Not less than one-third of total seats (including SC/ST reserved seats) reserved for women, rotated after each election, (b) Rationale: (i) Broad participation: Rotation ensures different constituencies benefit from reservation over time, preventing concentration of benefits in few areas, (ii) Political socialization: Rotation exposes more communities to reserved category representatives, building inclusive political culture, (iii) Preventing entrenchment: Rotation prevents reserved seats becoming permanent fiefdoms, encouraging broader political engagement, (c) Applications: (i) Implementation: State Election Commissions determine rotation pattern based on population data, administrative units, (ii) Impact: Rotation ensures SC/ST, women representatives emerge from diverse constituencies, enhancing representative character of Municipalities, (iii) Challenges: Rotation may disrupt continuity in representation; requires voter awareness about changing reserved constituencies, (d) Illustrates inclusive urban federalism: Reservation rotation operationalizes substantive equality in urban local governance; ensures broad-based political participation of marginalized groups while preventing entrenchment, building inclusive local democracy.
Answer: True
Reservation rotation in Panchayats: (a) Article 243D (73rd Amendment): (i) Reservation for SC/ST: Seats reserved in proportion to population, rotated after each election to different constituencies, (ii) Reservation for women: Not less than one-third of total seats (including SC/ST reserved seats) reserved for women, rotated after each election, (b) Rationale: (i) Broad participation: Rotation ensures different constituencies benefit from reservation over time, preventing concentration of benefits in few areas, (ii) Political socialization: Rotation exposes more communities to reserved category representatives, building inclusive political culture, (iii) Preventing entrenchment: Rotation prevents reserved seats becoming permanent fiefdoms, encouraging broader political engagement, (c) Applications: (i) Implementation: State Election Commissions determine rotation pattern based on population data, administrative units, (ii) Impact: Rotation ensures SC/ST, women representatives emerge from diverse constituencies, enhancing representative character of Panchayats, (iii) Challenges: Rotation may disrupt continuity in representation; requires voter awareness about changing reserved constituencies, (d) Illustrates inclusive federalism: Reservation rotation operationalizes substantive equality at grassroots; ensures broad-based political participation of marginalized groups while preventing entrenchment, building inclusive local democracy.
Answer: True
Municipality term and dissolution: (a) Article 243U (74th Amendment): (i) Fixed term: Municipalities have term of five years from date of first meeting, (ii) Timely elections: Elections to constitute new Municipality must be completed before expiry of term, (iii) Early dissolution: If Municipality dissolved before term expiry, elections must be held within six months from date of dissolution, (b) Rationale: (i) Democratic continuity: Fixed term ensures regular, predictable elections for urban local self-governance, (ii) Accountability: Timely elections enable voters to hold representatives accountable, (iii) Stability: Six-month limit for re-election after dissolution prevents prolonged administrator rule, (c) Applications: (i) Election scheduling: State Election Commissions plan elections to ensure timely completion, (ii) Dissolution safeguards: States must justify early dissolution; courts can intervene if dissolution arbitrary, (iii) Transition management: Administrators manage Municipality functions during interim period before new elections, (d) Challenges: (i) Delays: Administrative, logistical challenges may delay elections despite constitutional mandate, (ii) Political interference: State governments may delay elections for political advantage, (iii) Capacity: SECs need resources, planning to conduct timely elections across urban areas, (e) Illustrates democratic federalism: Article 243U ensures regular, timely elections for urban local self-governance; safeguards prevent arbitrary dissolution, ensure continuity of democratic local institutions.
Answer: True
Panchayat term and dissolution: (a) Article 243E (73rd Amendment): (i) Fixed term: Panchayats have term of five years from date of first meeting, (ii) Timely elections: Elections to constitute new Panchayat must be completed before expiry of term, (iii) Early dissolution: If Panchayat dissolved before term expiry, elections must be held within six months from date of dissolution, (b) Rationale: (i) Democratic continuity: Fixed term ensures regular, predictable elections for local self-governance, (ii) Accountability: Timely elections enable voters to hold representatives accountable, (iii) Stability: Six-month limit for re-election after dissolution prevents prolonged administrator rule, (c) Applications: (i) Election scheduling: State Election Commissions plan elections to ensure timely completion, (ii) Dissolution safeguards: States must justify early dissolution; courts can intervene if dissolution arbitrary, (iii) Transition management: Administrators manage Panchayat functions during interim period before new elections, (d) Challenges: (i) Delays: Administrative, logistical challenges may delay elections despite constitutional mandate, (ii) Political interference: State governments may delay elections for political advantage, (iii) Capacity: SECs need resources, planning to conduct timely elections across large rural areas, (e) Illustrates democratic federalism: Article 243E ensures regular, timely elections for local self-governance; safeguards prevent arbitrary dissolution, ensure continuity of democratic local institutions.
Answer: True
Municipal election disputes: (a) Article 243ZG (74th Amendment): Bar on interference by courts in electoral matters of Municipalities: (i) No election to Municipality 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 Municipal 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 243ZG 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: 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: True
Lokpal and whistle blower protection: (a) Lokpal Act, 2013: Includes provisions for protection of complainants: (i) Identity protection: Lokpal proceedings in camera to protect complainant identity, (ii) Penalty for victimization: Punishment for officials who victimize complainants, (iii) Interim relief: Lokpal can recommend interim relief to protect complainants from harassment, (b) Whistle Blowers Protection Act, 2014: (i) Purpose: Protect persons making public interest disclosures about corruption, misuse of power by public servants, (ii) Mechanism: Competent authority to inquire into disclosures, protect whistle blowers from victimization, (iii) Non-implementation: Not fully notified due to debates on balancing transparency with national security (proposed amendments to exempt certain categories of information), (c) Interface: (i) Complementary frameworks: Lokpal handles corruption complaints; Whistle Blowers Act protects those reporting corruption, (ii) Implementation gap: Lack of operational Whistle Blowers Act weakens protection for complainants approaching Lokpal, (d) Applications: (i) Corruption reporting: Citizens, officials report corruption to Lokpal; protection mechanisms essential to encourage reporting, (ii) National security balance: Ensuring whistle blower protection doesn't compromise sensitive information, (e) Illustrates accountability architecture: Effective anti-corruption requires both investigative mechanism (Lokpal) and protection for those reporting corruption (Whistle Blowers Act); implementation gaps highlight tension between transparency, security.