Saturday, April 12, 2014

Panchyati Raj


1  
1.       In the history of Panchayati Raj in India, on 24 April 1993, the Constitutional (73rd Amendment) Act, 1992 came into force to provide constitutional status to the Panchayati Raj institutions.
2.       Panchayati raj system exists in all the states except Nagaland, Meghalaya and Mizoram. Also all the UTs except Delhi.
3.       The 3-tier system of Panchayati Raj consists of a) village level panchayat b) block level panchayat c) district level panchayat.
4.       Powers and responsibilities are delegated to Panchayats at the appropriate level :-
a) Preparation of plan for economic development and social justice.
b)Implementation of schemes for economic development and social justice in relation to 29 subjects given in Eleventh Schedule of the Constitution.
c)To levy, collect and appropriate taxes, duties, tolls and fees.
5.       Panchayatsamiti is a local government body at the tehsil or Taluka level in India. It works for the villages of the Tehsil or Taluka that together are called a Development Block. The PanchayatSamiti is the link between the Gram Panchayat and the district administration.
a)Function of Panchayatsamiti:-Implement schemes for the development of agriculture.
b) Establishment of primary health centres and primary schools.
c) Supply of drinking water, drainage, construction/repair of roads.
d) Development of cottage and small-scale industries and opening of cooperative societies.
e) Establishment of youth organisations
6.       In the district level of the panchayati raj system you have the "zillaparishad". It looks after the administration of the rural area of the district and its office is located at the district headquarters. The Hindi word Parishad means Council and ZillaParishad translates to District Council. It is headed by the "District Collector" or the "District Magistrate" or the "Deputy Comminissioner". it is the link between the state government and the panchayatsamiti (local held government at the block level)
7.        The Royal Commission on Decentralisation - 1907 under the chairmanship of C.E.H. HOBHOUSE recognised the importance of panchayats at the village level.
8.       Mahatma Gandhiji favoured Village Swaraj and strengthening the village panchayat to the fullest extent and on the other end, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar opposed this idea.
9.       The Balwantrai Mehta Committee (1957):- In 1957,BalwanRai Mehta Committee studied the Community Development Projects and the National Extension Service and assessed the extent to which the movement had succeeded in utilising local initiatives and in creating institutions to ensure continuity in the process of improving economic and social conditions in rural areas. The Committee held that community development would only be deep and enduring when the community was involved in the planning, decision-making and implementation process.The suggestions were for as follows  :- a) an early establishment of elected local bodies and devolution to them of necessary resources, power and authority, that the basic unit of democratic decentralisation was at the block/ samiti level since the area of jurisdiction of the local body should neither be too large nor too small. The block was large enough for efficiency and economy of b) administration, and small enough for sustaining a sense of involvement in the citizens,
c) such body must not be constrained by too much control by the government or government agencies,                                                                                                     d) the body must be constituted for five years by indirect elections from the village panchayats,                                                                                                                     e) its functions should cover the development of agriculture in all its aspects, the promotion of local industries and others                                             f) services such as drinking water, road building, etc., and the higher level body, ZillaParishad, would play an advisory role.
10.   With the coming of theJanta Party into power at the Centre in 1977, a serious view was taken of the weaknesses in the functioning of Panchayati Raj. It was decided to appoint a high-level committee under the chairmanship of Ashok Mehta to exa¬mine and suggest measures to strengthen PRIs. The Committee had to evolve an effective decentralised system of development for PRIs. They made the following recommendations  :-A)  the district is a viable administrative unit for which planning, co-ordination and resource allocation are feasible and technical expertise available, B) PRIs as a two-tier system, with MandalPanchayat at the base and ZillaParishad at the top,C)  the PRIs are capable of planning for themselves with the resources available to them,D) district planning should take care of the urban-rural continuum,E) representation of SCs and STs in the election to PRIs on the basis of their population, F) four-year term of PRIs,G) participation of political parties in elections,H) any financial devolution should be committed to accepting that much of the developmental functions at the district level would be played by the panchayats.
11.   The G.V.K.RaoCommittee was appointed to once again look at various aspects of PRIs. The Committee was of the opinion that a total view of rural development must be taken in which PRIs must play a central role in handling people's problems. It recommended the following  :-I) PRIs have to be activated and provided with all the required support to become effective organisations, II)PRIs at the district level and below should be assigned the work of planning, implementation and monitoring of rural development programmes, and III) the block development office should be the spinal cord of the rural development process.
12.   L.M. Singhvi Committee studied panchayatiraj. The Gram Sabha was considered as the base of a decentralised democracy, and PRIs viewed as institutions of self-governance which would actually facilitate the participation of the people in the process of planning and development. It recommended : A) local self-government should be constitutionally recognised, protected and preserved by the inclusion of new chapter in the Constitution, B)non-involvement of political parties in Panchayat elections.
13.   The suggestion of giving Panchayaticonstitutional status was opposed by the Sarkaria Commission, but the idea, however, gained momentum in the late 1980s especially because of the endorsement by the late Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, who introduced the 64th Constitutional Amendment Bill in 1989. The 64th Amendment Bill was prepared and introduced in the lower house of Parliament. But it got defeated in the RajyaSabha as non-convincing. He lost the general elections too. In 1989, the National Front introduced the 74th Constitutional Amendment Bill, which could not become an Act because of the dissolution of the Ninth LokSabha. All these various suggestions and recommendations and means of strengthening PRIs were considered while formulating the new Constitutional Amendment Act.
14.   The Constitutional (73rd Amendment) Act, passed in 1992 &came into force on April 24, 1993. It was meant to provide constitutional sanction to establish "democracy at the grassroots level as it is at the state level or national level". Its main features are as follows :
• The Gram Sabha or village assembly as a deliberative body to decentralised governance has been envisaged as the foundation of the Panchayati Raj System.
• A uniform three-tier structure of panchayats at village (Gram Panchayat — GP), intermediate or block (PanchayatSamiti — PS) and district (ZillaParishad — ZP) levels.
• All the seats in a panchayat at every level are to be filled by elections from respective territorial constituencies.
• Not less than one-third of the total seats for membership as well as office of chairpersons of each tier have to be reserved for women.
• Reservation for weaker castes and tribes (SCs and STs) have to be provided at all levels in proportion to their population in the panchayats.
• To supervise, direct and control the regular and smooth elections to panchayats, a State Election Commission has to be constituted in every State and UT.
• The Act has ensured constitution of a State Finance Commission in every State/UT, for every five years, to suggest measures to strengthen finances of PRIs.
• To promote bottom-up-planning, the District Planning Committee fDPC} in every district has been accorded constitutional status.
• An indicative list of 29 items has been given in Eleventh Schedule of the Constitution. Panchayats are expected to play an effective role in planning and implementation of works related to these 29 items.
15.   Ministry of Panchayati Raj looks into all matters relating ofPanchayati Raj and Panchayati Raj Institutions. It was created in May 2004.
16.   The launching of Community Development Programmed on 2nd October 1953 the National Extension Service was launched.
17.   On 2nd October 1959, Rajasthan came to be the first State to establish Panchayati Raj.Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru, the 1st Prime Minister of India had inaugurated Panchayati Raj in India at Nagaur in Rajasthan on 2nd October, 1959.
18.   Madhya Pradesh was the first state in the country to comply with the spirit and letter of the act-1992
19.   Amendment to article 243D of the Constitution of India for enhancing reservation for women in Panchayats to 50 %.
20.   Art.40 – the state shall take steps to organise village panchayats&endow them with such powers & authority as may be necessary to enable them to function as units of self government.
21.   Part IX of the constitution envisages three tier system of panchyats. Art. 243 to 243-O contain provision of panchyat.
22.   A person who has attained the age of 21 years is eligible to be a member of panchyat.
23.    S K Dey : The first Minister for panchayati raj in India. 
24.    The K. Santhanam Committee was appointed to look solely at the issue of PRI                         finance, in 1963.


Friday, March 14, 2014

Doing away board exam resulted in decline of standard of Education

Exam is thought of as a way to train students for the tough tests they undergo later in life. If home is thought to be the first place of education, school  comes next. Its importance lies in its being as a place which allows a child to have first interaction with the outside world. The all-round development of a child depends a lot on the school where he or she reads. But doing board examination in school has resulted in the deterioration of education standards.  Reports show that without annual examinations, the quality of education is going down. Students don’t work hard under the impression that they would be promoted to the next class without any evaluation. The current trend of declaring all students pass up to class VIII is very dangerous.

The present system of evaluation will show the children educated on paper, but they won’t be up to the mark on the learning scale. Compulsory elementary education to every child does not mean education on paper only. The standard of education must be maintained and it should be ensured that each student studies the prescribed books and learns his lessons. The best way to test it is examination. 

Making English language compulsory in UPSC Examination



In today’s India, administrators have to be able to communicate effectively in English. To that extent, the UPSC exam must ensure that a successful candidate has a minimum level of proficiency in the language.  But using English as a merit-ranking device may not produce an optimum outcome. While candidates who study in English-medium schools are likely to know the language better than others, there is no reason to assume their overall knowledge base or skill set is better than those who have studied in other languages. Allowing candidates to answer a common set of questions in the language they are most comfortable in is the best way to assess their suitability. Of course, the post-entrance training process can and must be used to improve standards of English.  The thrust should be laid on selecting candidates who possesses knowledge skills and above all high degree of integrity, selfless devotion to public and strict adherence to the finest ideals of our liberal, progressive and forward looking constitution.


Sunday, March 9, 2014

General Knowledge-2013-14

1.              Karen Tan:- Singapore has appointed Karen Tan as Permanent Representative to UN.
2.              K K Paul:- Former Delhi Police Chief and member of U.P.S.C has recently been apponted as the new Governor of Meghalya.
3.              Najeeb Jung:- Former Jamia Millia Islamia Vice Chancellor was appointed as the Delhi Lt. Governor replacing Tejendra Khanna.
4.              Ganeve Lalji:- Lt. Ganeve Lalji created history by becoming the first woman to be appointed as a key aide to an Army Commander as part of Indian Army Chief General Bikrim Singh’s effort to provide more avenues to women in the forces.
5.              Amrita Singh:- PM daughter was recently awarded with the India Abroad Publisher’s special award for excellence 2012 by ‘India abroad’. She was honoured for her ground breaking work in the field of human right law.
6.              Tribal World:- The Tribal Development Cooperative Corporation of Odisha Limited recently opened the outlet called ‘Tribal world’ at the Biji Patnai Airport in Bhubneshwar in order to put on the podium tribal art as well as heritage of Odisha.
7.              Chumar:- The troops of Chinese PLA intruded the Chumar sector in Ladakh and vandalised the observation bunkers and cut down the wires of Cameras which were used to overlook the Chinese Territory.
8.              OSINT:- OSINT stands for Open Source Intelligence Solution , also named as Delhi Police internal surveillance System to snooping. The system will be used to extract and analyse information on the internet (on social network and internet communication)
9.              Operation Rahat:- It is the name of IAF operation to rescue stranded pilgrims in Uttrakhand and H.P. after heavy rains wrecked havoc in North India.
10.          13th Amendment:- 13th Amendment is the amendment that followed the Indo-Srilanka Accord of July 1987. Srilanka had agreed to devolve some authority to the province. India has repeteadly emphasised to Lanka on the need to fully implement the constitutional provision dealing with devolution of powers to province without dilution and to go beyond it to ensure meaningful development.
11.          Mountain Strike Corps:- The cabine committee on security recently gave its approval for raising a mountain strike corps along the China border. The proposed ‘Mountain Strike Corps’ would be headquarted at Panegarh in West Bengal.
12.          Black Forest:- The Black forest in  Colorado USA came into news in connection with the devastation fire  .
13.          Takism Square:- Takism Square in Istanbut, Turkey came into news in connection with widespread protest against the government move to build mall or museum at Gazi Park, near Takism square. It is one of the few green spaces left in the city.
14.          Rangacheng:- The place in Andaman and Nicobar islands came into news in connection with the installation of the early Tsunami Warning System, which can predict a Tsunami immediately after an earthquake.
15.          Balochistan:- The Residency, a national monument that was used by Muhammed Ali Jinnah during his last days at Ziral was blown up by the militants of the Balochistan Liberation Army.
16.               Gareth Bale:- Gareth Bale, who was chosen as the best player in the English Premier League last season came into news recently as he became the most expensive player of all time with his transfer from Tothenham Hotspur to Real Madrid with a transfer fee of 100 million Euros.
17.               Christiano Ronaldo:­- He became the highest paid footballer in the world when his contract with Real Madrid was recently renewed for 5 years for a whopping $206 million.
18.               Leader Paes:- He became the oldest player to win a Grand Slam tennis men’s double at the US Open partnering with Radek Stapanek of Czech Republic. It was his 14th Grand Slam title at all.
19.               Tony Abbot:- He recently became the new Australian PM after his party –Liberal National Party Coalition came into power.

20.               Devendra Jhajharia:- Rajasthan para athelete and Javelin thrower gave India its first ever Gold Medal in the World Para Atheletics Championships in Lyon, France. 

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Latest Who is Who?

1.              Roshni:- Roshni is the placement linked skill development scheme launched recently to target rural men and women, mostly tribal in the Maoist affected areas.
2.              Panmunjom:- The border truce village between feuding neighbours North Korea and South Korea came into news in connection with the talk between them first after two years.  .
3.              S. Ramadorai:- Former CEO of Tata Consultancy Service was recently named as Chairman of Air Asia India by Air Asia Chief Mr. Tony Fernandez.
4.              Kishanganga Hydel Project:- 330MW power project in Jammu and Kashmir came into news as the Internatioanl Court of Arbitration recently ruled in favour of India’s  position on the diversion of Kishanganga water.
5.              Mauritia:- Recently geoscientists have discovered the remains of a lost ancient continent between India and Madagascar. The continent fragments known as Mauritia which detached 60 million years ago while Medagascar and India drifted apart found buried under huge masses of Lava.
6.              REX: - It is the name of the world’s first bionic man, that has been created using nearly &1 millino worth of State of the Art limbs and organs.
7.              Nik Wallenda:- He became the first person in the world to crossthe Grand Canyon on a 2inch steel cable.
8.              Rafael Nadal:- Rafael Nadal of Spain recently won the French Open men’s singles title 2013. He became the first man to capture the same Grand Slam title eight times.
9.              Mamnoon Hussain:- Indian born Mr. Mamnoon Hussain, a close aide of PM Mr. Nawaz Sharif was elected as the 12th President of Pakistan for a 5-years term.
10.          Adly Mansour:- The Chief Justice of Egypt’s Supreme constitutional Court, was sworn in as the interm President of Egypt after the military ousted Islamist President Mr. Mohamed Morsey following massive street demonstrations.
11.          Hemant Soren: - He was recently sworn in as the Chief Minister of the coalition government in Jharkhand led by JMM.
12.          Sujata Singh:-  India’s Ambassador to Germany and the most senior IFS officer was recently appointed as the India’s new foreign secretary replacing incumbent Mr. RAnjan Mathai. She became third women to head the country’s foreign office after Ms. Chokila Iyer and Ms. Nirupama Rao.
13.          Nisha Desai Biswas:- An accomplished Indian-American administrator was recently appointed as the Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia.
14.          Ajay Kakkar:- Indian origin peer has been made the Chairman of the influential House of Lords Appointment Commission, an advisory body which selects new independent members of the UK’s House of Lords.
15.          Karen Tan:- Singapore has appointed Karen Tan as Permanent Representative to UN.
16.          K K Paul:- Former Delhi Police Chief and member of U.P.S.C has recently been apponted as the new Governor of Meghalya.
17.          Najeeb Jung:- Former Jamia Millia Islamia Vice Chancellor was appointed as the Delhi Lt. Governor replacing Tejendra Khanna.
18.          Ganeve Lalji:- Lt. Ganeve Lalji created history by becoming the first woman to be appointed as a key aide to an Army Commander as part of Indian Army Chief General Bikrim Singh’s effort to provide more avenues to women in the forces.
19.          Amrita Singh:- PM daughter was recently awarded with the India Abroad Publisher’s special award for excellence 2012 by ‘India abroad’. She was honoured for her ground breaking work in the field of human right law.
20.          Tribal World:- The Tribal Development Cooperative Corporation of Odisha Limited recently opened the outlet called ‘Tribal world’ at the Biji Patnai Airport in Bhubneshwar in order to put on the podium tribal art as well as heritage of Odisha.
21.          Chumar:- The troops of Chinese PLA intruded the Chumar sector in Ladakh and vandalised the observation bunkers and cut down the wires of Cameras which were used to overlook the Chinese Territory.
22.          OSINT:- OSINT stands for Open Source Intelligence Solution , also named as Delhi Police internal surveillance System to snooping. The system will be used to extract and analyse information on the internet (on social network and internet communication)
23.          Operation Rahat:- It is the name of IAF operation to rescue stranded pilgrims in Uttrakhand and H.P. after heavy rains wrecked havoc in North India.
24.          13th Amendment:- 13th Amendment is the amendment that followed the Indo-Srilanka Accord of July 1987. Srilanka had agreed to devolve some authority to the province. India has repeteadly emphasised to Lanka on the need to fully implement the constitutional provision dealing with devolution of powers to province without dilution and to go beyond it to ensure meaningful development.
25.          Mountain Strike Corps:- The cabine committee on security recently gave its approval for raising a mountain strike corps along the China border. The proposed ‘Mountain Strike Corps’ would be headquarted at Panegarh in West Bengal.
26.          Black Forest:- The Black forest in  Colorado USA came into news in connection with the devastation fire  .
27.          Enniskillen:- The Place in Ireland came into news in connection with G-8 Summit.
28.          Takism Square:- Takism Square in Istanbut, Turkey came into news in connection with widespread protest against the government move to build mall or museum at Gazi Park, near Takism square. It is one of the few green spaces left in the city.
29.          Rangacheng:- The place in Andaman and Nicobar islands came into news in connection with the installation of the early Tsunami Warning System, which can predict a Tsunami immediately after an earthquake.
30.          Balochistan:- The Residency, a national monument that was used by Muhammed Ali Jinnah during his last days at Ziral was blown up by the militants of the Balochistan Liberation Army.
31.               Gareth Bale:- Gareth Bale, who was chosen as the best player in the English Premier League last season came into news recently as he became the most expensive player of all time with his transfer from Tothenham Hotspur to Real Madrid with a transfer fee of 100 million Euros.
32.               Christiano Ronaldo:­- He became the highest paid footballer in the world when his contract with Real Madrid was recently renewed for 5 years for a whopping $206 million.
33.               Leader Paes:- He became the oldest player to win a Grand Slam tennis men’s double at the US Open partnering with Radek Stapanek of Czech Republic. It was his 14th Grand Slam title at all.
34.               Tony Abbot:- He recently became the new Australian PM after his party –Liberal National Party Coalition came into power.
35.               Devendra Jhajharia:- Rajasthan para athelete and Javelin thrower gave India its first ever Gold Medal in the World Para Atheletics Championships in Lyon, France.