Centre State relations
The Constitution of India provides for a dual polity with a clear division of powers between the Union and the States, each being supreme within the sphere allotted to it.
- The Indian federation is not the result of an agreement between independent units, and the units of Indian federation cannot leave the federation.
- Thus, the Constitution, under the Seventh Schedule (Article 246), contains elaborate provisions to regulate the various dimensions of the relations between the Centre and the states. It defines the distribution of powers between the Union and states by listing the subjects that each level of government can legislate on, ....
Do You Want to Read More?
Subscribe Now
Take Annual Subscription and get the following Advantage
The annual members of the Civil Services Chronicle can read the monthly content of the magazine as well as the Chronicle magazine archives.
Readers can study all the material before the last six months of the Civil Services Chronicle monthly issue in the form of Chronicle magazine archives.
Related Content
- 1 NITI Aayog@10: Fostering Cooperative Federalism
- 2 Doctrine of Constitutional Morality: Interpretation in Recent Supreme Court Rulings
- 3 Caste Census and the Constitutional Mandate for Equality
- 4 16th Finance Commission & Fiscal Federalism
- 5 Legislative Competence in New Tech Sectors
- 6 Separation of Powers: Recent Legislative vs. Judicial Standoffs
- 7 Consumer Protection & Digital Markets
- 8 Electoral Funding & Transparency
- 9 Constitutional Interpretation and Advisory Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
- 10 Anti-Defection Law & Speaker’s Role