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Answer: 100
MGNREGA, 2005: Guarantees 100 days of unskilled manual wage employment per rural household per year at statutory minimum wages. Features: (a) Legal right to work, (b) Decentralized planning by Gram Sabhas, (c) 60:40 wage-material ratio, (d) Social audit mandatory, (e) Unemployment allowance if work not provided within 15 days. World's largest public works program; reduces distress migration, strengthens rural livelihoods, empowers women (1/3 participation mandate).
Answer: False
RTI Act, Section 8(1): Lists exemptions including information which would prejudicially affect: (a) Sovereignty/integrity of India, (b) Security, strategic, scientific, economic interests of State, (c) Relation with foreign State, (d) Incitement to offence. Such information may be denied even if not explicitly covered by OSA. However, Section 8(2): Even exempt information must be disclosed if public interest in disclosure outweighs harm. Balances transparency with legitimate security concerns; courts decide on case-by-case basis.
Answer: Both individual and community forest rights
Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006: Recognizes: (a) Individual rights: land under cultivation, habitat, minor forest produce, (b) Community rights: grazing, fishing, water bodies, traditional seasonal resource access, habitat for PVTGs, (c) Rights to protect/ conserve/manage community forest resources. Aims to correct historical injustice to forest dwellers; balances conservation with livelihood security. Implementation challenges: delayed recognition, conflicting claims, bureaucratic hurdles.
Answer: 5
NFSA, 2013: Entitlements: (a) Priority households: 5 kg/person/month at ₹3/kg rice, ₹2/kg wheat, ₹1/kg coarse grains, (b) Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) households: 35 kg/household/month at same prices, (c) Pregnant/lactating women, children 6 months-14 years: nutritious meals, maternity benefit. Covers up to 75% rural, 50% urban population. World's largest food security program; implemented through PDS with Aadhaar seeding, portability.
Answer: True
RTE Act, 2009: Applies to all India except J&K (which had separate Constitution under Article 370). Post-abrogation of Article 370 (2019), RTE Act extended to J&K. Act mandates: (a) Free education for 6-14 years, (b) 25% reservation in private unaided schools for EWS/disadvantaged groups, (c) No detention policy (modified by 2019 amendment), (d) Teacher qualification standards. Implementation varies across States; challenges include infrastructure gaps, teacher shortages, learning outcomes.
Answer: Article 21A
Article 21A (inserted by 86th Amendment, 2002): 'The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of six to fourteen years in such manner as the State may, by law, determine.' RTE Act, 2009 operationalizes this Fundamental Right: mandates 25% reservation in private schools for EWS, prohibits screening/capitation fees, sets teacher-student ratios, infrastructure norms. Makes education justiciable right for children 6-14 years.
Answer: A multi-institutional framework combining legislative oversight, independent bodies, transparency laws, and citizen participation has evolved to strengthen accountability
India's accountability evolution: (a) Traditional: Parliamentary committees, CAG audit, judicial review, (b) Post-1990s reforms: RTI Act (2005), CVC statutory status (2003), Lokpal Act (2013), NHRC (1993), (c) Grassroots: Social audit (MGNREGA), Gram Sabha, Citizen's Charter, (d) Technology: CPGRAMS, e-Governance, Digital India. Multi-layered framework recognizes that no single mechanism suffices; effectiveness depends on institutional independence, capacity building, political will, and active citizen engagement. Continuous refinement needed to address emerging challenges like digital governance, campaign finance, regulatory capture.
Answer: Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances
CPGRAMS: Launched by DARPG (Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances) in 2007. Features: (a) Online grievance submission, (b) Tracking via unique registration number, (c) Time-bound redressal, (d) Appeal mechanism, (e) Analytics for systemic improvements. Part of broader public grievance redressal reforms to make administration responsive and accountable. Complements RTI, Citizen's Charter, social audit mechanisms.
Answer: True
Lokpal Act, 2013, Section 14: Extends jurisdiction to: (a) Public servants as defined in Prevention of Corruption Act, (b) Any person who is/has been Chairperson, member, officer, director of a society/trust/body corporate/NGO: (i) Receiving foreign contribution above ₹10 lakh under FCRA, OR (ii) Receiving government funding above ₹1 crore, OR (iii) Having annual income above ₹1 crore. Ensures accountability of entities handling public resources, but raises concerns about regulatory overreach on civil society.
Answer: Give written notice to third party and consider their representation before deciding
RTI Act, Section 11: Procedure for third party information: (a) If PIO intends to disclose information supplied by third party and treated as confidential, must give written notice to third party within 5 days, (b) Third party may make representation within 10 days, (c) PIO considers representation but can disclose if public interest outweighs harm, (d) Third party can appeal to Information Commission. Balances transparency with legitimate confidentiality interests.
Answer: accountability
India's accountability architecture: (a) CAG: Financial accountability through audit, (b) CVC: Vigilance administration and corruption prevention, (c) Lokpal/Lokayuktas: Independent investigation of corruption against high functionaries, (d) Information Commissions: Transparency through RTI, (e) Parliamentary committees: Legislative oversight. Multi-layered framework ensures checks and balances; effectiveness depends on independence, capacity, and political will for implementation.
Answer: True
Digital India (launched 2015): Three vision areas: (1) Digital infrastructure as utility to every citizen, (2) Governance and services on demand, (3) Digital empowerment of citizens. Key components: BharatNet (rural broadband), Common Service Centres, e-Governance platforms (UMANG, DigiLocker), digital payments. Aims to improve transparency, efficiency, accessibility of public services; reduce corruption through technology-enabled accountability.
Answer: Centralization
UNDP's eight characteristics of good governance: (1) Participation, (2) Rule of law, (3) Transparency, (4) Responsiveness, (5) Consensus orientation, (6) Equity and inclusiveness, (7) Effectiveness and efficiency, (8) Accountability. Centralization is contrary to good governance principles which emphasize decentralization, participation, and subsidiarity. Indian governance reforms (e.g., 73rd/74th Amendments, RTI, Citizen's Charter) align with these principles.
Answer: 250
RTI Act, Section 20(1): Information Commission can impose penalty of ₹250 per day on PIO for: (a) Unreasonable delay, (b) Malafidely denying request, (c) Knowingly giving incomplete/incorrect/misleading information, (d) Destroying information. Maximum penalty: ₹25,000. Also recommends disciplinary action under service rules. Penalty provision ensures accountability of PIOs and effectiveness of RTI regime.
Answer: True
Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993, Section 13: NHRC has powers of civil court under Code of Civil Procedure for: (a) Summoning/enforcing attendance of witnesses, (b) Discovering/producing documents, (c) Receiving evidence on affidavits, (d) Requisitioning public records, (e) Issuing commissions for witness examination. However, NHRC recommendations are not binding; implementation depends on government response. Balances investigative powers with executive implementation responsibility.
Answer: Prosecuting corruption cases in courts
CVC functions under CVC Act, 2003: (a) Inquire into corruption offences by All India Services, Group A officers, etc., (b) Exercise superintendence over CBI's anti-corruption work, (c) Advise government on vigilance policy, (d) Review progress of investigations. However, prosecution is conducted by CBI/Enforcement Directorate through public prosecutors; CVC doesn't directly prosecute. Clarifies institutional roles in anti-corruption framework.
Answer: 30
RTI Act, Section 7(1): PIO must provide information within 30 days of request. Section 7(1) proviso: If information concerns life/liberty, must be provided within 48 hours. Section 7(3): If request transferred to another public authority, 30 days computed from receipt by transferee. Time-bound response ensures prompt access to information; penalties for delay promote accountability of public authorities.
Answer: False
Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013: Mandates States to establish Lokayuktas within one year, but States have flexibility in design: powers, jurisdiction, composition vary. Some States had Lokayuktas before 2013 (e.g., Maharashtra, 1971); others enacted laws later. As of 2024, not all States have functional Lokayuktas. Highlights challenges in implementing uniform accountability mechanisms across India's diverse federal structure.
Answer: Three Judges Cases (1981, 1993, 1998)
Three Judges Cases: (a) First Judges Case (S.P. Gupta, 1981): Executive had primacy in appointments, (b) Second Judges Case (1993): Collegium system evolved; CJI's opinion has primacy, (c) Third Judges Case (1998): Collegium expanded to CJI + 4 senior-most SC judges. 99th Amendment (NJAC) struck down in 2015, reaffirming collegium. Ongoing debate on balancing judicial independence with accountability in appointments.
Answer: Comptroller and Auditor General
Public Accounts Committee (PAC): Oldest parliamentary committee (1921). Functions: (a) Examine CAG reports on Union/State accounts, (b) Ensure expenditure was within grants, (c) Detect waste, extravagance, corruption, (d) Recommend corrective action. Composition: 22 members (15 LS, 7 RS); Chairperson from Opposition by convention. Critical mechanism for legislative financial oversight of executive.