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Article
10 Apr 2026
Why in news?
Elections to the Legislative Assemblies of Kerala, Assam, and the Union Territory of Puducherry began on April 9. Despite being a UT, Puducherry has its own legislative assembly and Chief Minister, similar to Delhi and Jammu & Kashmir.
This highlights the unique governance structure of certain Union Territories that combine central oversight with elements of state-like legislative authority.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Union Territories in India: Governance and Special Status
- Delhi vs Puducherry: Governance, Powers, and Constitutional Framework
- Jammu & Kashmir as a Union Territory: Limited Legislative Autonomy
Union Territories in India: Governance and Special Status
- Union Territories (UTs) are governed under Part VIII of the Constitution (Articles 239–242), where administration is vested in the President through appointed administrators.
- Most UTs, such as Chandigarh, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, and Lakshadweep, do not have elected legislatures.
- Puducherry’s Unique Legislative Status
- Puducherry was granted a legislature under the Government of Union Territories Act, 1963, reflecting its historical and political context.
- The Treaty of Cession (1956) formalised the transfer of territories from France, though legal ratification occurred in 1962.
- India had exercised administrative control since 1954. The continuation of a representative assembly followed earlier French practices.
- Constitutional Provision for Legislature
- Puducherry’s special status is provided under Article 239A, which allows for a local legislature and a council of ministers.
- Additionally, the President has the power to nominate members to the Assembly, influencing its political dynamics.
- Apart from Puducherry, only Delhi (since 1992) and Jammu & Kashmir (since 2019) have legislatures among Union Territories, making them exceptions within the broader UT governance framework.
Delhi vs Puducherry: Governance, Powers, and Constitutional Framework
- Delhi was granted NCT status through the 69th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1991, introducing Article 239AA.
- It provides for a legislative assembly with powers over State and Concurrent List subjects, except public order, police, and land.
- The division of powers between the Lieutenant-Governor (L-G) and the elected government has been contentious.
- Judicial and legislative developments since 2015 have seen shifting control over “services,” with the balance of power alternating between the elected government and the Centre.
- On the other hand, Puducherry’s legislature enjoys relatively broader powers without specific subject exclusions, but remains subject to Parliament’s overriding authority under Article 246(4), meaning central laws prevail in case of conflict.
- Role of Lieutenant-Governor (LG)
- While Delhi’s LG has defined discretionary powers under Article 239AA, Puducherry operates under Article 239A and the 1963 Act, which do not clearly define such powers.
- The Supreme Court in K. Lakshminarayanan v. Union of India (2019) clarified that Puducherry’s LG is bound by the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, except in exceptional cases.
- Constitutional Safeguards and President’s Role
- Under Article 240, the President can make regulations for UTs like Puducherry when the legislature is not functional.
- In Delhi, Article 239AB allows suspension of constitutional provisions and imposition of President’s rule if governance fails.
- Key Difference in Governance Structure
- Delhi’s governance involves greater central oversight and defined LG discretion, while Puducherry’s system, though subject to parliamentary supremacy, grants greater operational authority to the elected government in routine administration.
Jammu & Kashmir as a Union Territory: Limited Legislative Autonomy
- In 2019, the abrogation of Article 370 led to the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, bifurcating the former state into two UTs—Jammu & Kashmir (with a legislature) and Ladakh (without a legislature).
- The J&K Assembly can legislate on State List subjects, but public order and police remain under the Lieutenant-Governor (LG), limiting its autonomy compared to other UTs like Puducherry.
- The LG holds significant discretionary authority, including control over the bureaucracy and All India Services, extending beyond the Assembly’s legislative scope.
- Under Section 36, any bill involving financial obligations requires prior LG approval, giving the LG substantial control over financial and administrative functioning.
- In practice, Jammu & Kashmir operates with greater central control and reduced legislative independence, making it less autonomous than UTs like Puducherry and even Delhi.
Article
10 Apr 2026
Why in news?
India’s regulatory system has traditionally been highly punitive, where even minor procedural lapses or technical defaults could lead to criminal penalties, including imprisonment.
The Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2025-26 aims to shift from punitive regulation to trust-based governance, reducing unnecessary criminalisation.
It builds on the 2023 Act, which had already decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 Central laws, continuing efforts to make business regulations more facilitative.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Rationale Behind the Jan Vishwas Bill, 2026
- Key Features of the Jan Vishwas Bill, 2026
- Institutional Impact of the Jan Vishwas Bill
- Promoting Efficient Justice: Role of the Jan Vishwas Bill
Rationale Behind the Jan Vishwas Bill, 2026
- Expanding Decriminalisation and Ease of Living - The Bill proposes amendments to 784 provisions across 79 Central Acts, with 717 provisions set for decriminalisation, guided by the principle of proportionality in regulation.
- Separating Serious Offences from Procedural Lapses - It aims to distinguish between serious crimes like fraud and threats to public safety, and minor procedural non-compliance, ensuring that only genuinely harmful conduct attracts criminal penalties.
- Promoting Equity for MSMEs - The Bill seeks to reduce the disproportionate burden on small businesses and MSMEs, which often struggle with compliance due to limited capacity, by simplifying regulatory requirements.
- Reducing Judicial Burden - With over 4.8 crore pending cases, many involving minor regulatory issues, decriminalisation will help ease pressure on courts and allow focus on more serious cases.
- Principle of Proportionality in Regulation - Overall, the Bill emphasises that the State’s response should match the severity of the offence, promoting a more rational and fair regulatory framework.
Key Features of the Jan Vishwas Bill, 2026
- Shift from Criminal to Civil Penalties - The Bill replaces criminal liability for minor procedural lapses with civil and administrative measures, substituting imprisonment with monetary penalties based on the severity of violations.
- Graded and Proportionate Response - For minor or first-time defaults, the Bill introduces warnings and advisory notices instead of prosecution, ensuring a more proportionate and less punitive regulatory approach.
- Faster Resolution through Compounding - Expanded compounding provisions allow quicker settlement of cases without full legal proceedings, improving efficiency and reducing litigation burden.
- Strengthened Adjudication Mechanism - Adjudicating officers are empowered to decide cases within fixed timelines, supported by appellate mechanisms to ensure fairness and accountability.
- Dynamic Penalties and Simplified Procedures - Penalties will be periodically revised to maintain deterrence, while digitisation and procedural simplification aim to reduce inconsistencies and improve ease of doing business and living.
Institutional Impact of the Jan Vishwas Bill
- The Bill is expected to bring significant relief to the judiciary by diverting minor regulatory cases away from criminal courts, allowing them to focus on more serious and substantive matters.
- At the same time, it places greater responsibility on regulatory agencies, as administrative adjudication requires strong institutional capacity, clear guidelines, and effective oversight to prevent arbitrariness, with appellate mechanisms playing a crucial role in ensuring fairness.
- For businesses, especially MSMEs, the reduction in criminal liability lowers the fear of prosecution for technical lapses, thereby encouraging greater formalisation, transparency, and engagement with the formal economy.
Promoting Efficient Justice: Role of the Jan Vishwas Bill
- Rationalising Criminal Liability - The Bill promotes efficient justice by restricting criminal sanctions to serious offences involving intent or harm, while shifting minor procedural lapses to civil mechanisms, reducing over-criminalisation.
- Encouraging Voluntary Compliance - A more predictable and proportionate regulatory framework encourages transparency, as businesses are less deterred by the fear of prosecution for minor technical defaults.
- Importance of Implementation and Oversight - The effectiveness of the Bill depends on clear guidelines, strong oversight, and functional appellate mechanisms, ensuring that increased administrative discretion does not lead to arbitrariness.
- Potential Risks and Concerns - Challenges include excessive administrative discretion, weak appellate safeguards, continued burden through monetary penalties, and lack of uniform standards across laws.
- Reform Dependent on Institutional Capacity - While the Bill is a significant reform, its success will ultimately depend on whether institutions are adequately equipped and held accountable to implement it effectively.
Article
10 Apr 2026
Context:
- India’s women-centric policies are increasingly showing measurable outcomes, reflecting a shift from intent to institutionalised empowerment through large-scale programmes and governance focus.
- Over the past decade, women’s empowerment in India has been systematically designed and prioritised in policymaking.
- Women are now positioned as drivers of economic growth, not merely beneficiaries of welfare.
- This article highlights how India has transformed women’s empowerment from policy intent to institutional reality, examining achievements in financial inclusion, welfare, and participation, while emphasising the need for stronger last-mile delivery and leadership through the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam.
Financial Inclusion and Economic Participation
- Over 57 crore Jan Dhan accounts opened, with 55% held by women.
- Nearly 10 crore women in 90 lakh self-help groups driving grassroots entrepreneurship.
- Around 70% of MUDRA loans extended to women entrepreneurs.
- Female labour force participation has risen to ~37%, reversing past decline.
Social and Welfare Interventions
- Ujjwala Yojana has benefited over 10.5 crore households, improving health and reducing unpaid labour.
- Beti Bachao Beti Padhao has contributed to changing social attitudes towards girls.
- Programmes like Ayushman Bharat and Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan have expanded healthcare access and reduced vulnerability at critical stages of women’s lives.
- Collectively, these initiatives mark a shift from welfare-based support to empowerment-led growth, where design, delivery, and accountability are aligned for scale.
- While policy creation has been strong, the next phase requires ensuring effective last-mile delivery, deeper penetration, and sustained outcomes through better implementation and monitoring.
Bridging the Last Mile: From Access to Authority in Women’s Empowerment
- Gaps in Awareness and Delivery - Despite large-scale programmes, awareness gaps and uneven enrolment persist. Many women remain excluded due to limited access, making last-mile delivery and local administrative capacity crucial.
- Need for Administrative Focus and Accountability - India must shift from announcing schemes to ensuring saturation, focusing on outcomes rather than outputs. This requires district-level ownership, data-driven monitoring, inter-departmental convergence, and strong on-ground accountability.
- Role of Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam - The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam can be transformative by increasing women’s representation in legislatures, aligning policy design with real-life experiences and community needs.
- Multiplier Effect of Women’s Leadership - Greater representation can create a self-reinforcing cycle—better policies, higher participation, and stronger leadership pipelines, enhancing overall governance and development outcomes.
- Leveraging Global Opportunities - With a strong base in STEM education, India has the opportunity to expand women’s leadership across sectors like healthcare, science, enterprise, and governance in a knowledge-driven global economy.
- From Empowerment to Authority - With a strong policy foundation already in place, effective implementation of reforms can move women’s empowerment beyond access to actual decision-making authority and leadership.
The Way Forward: Building Capacity for Women-Led Development
- From Representation to Capability - Increasing representation must be matched with capacity building. India needs to invest in mentorship, policy exposure, and administrative support to prepare women for effective institutional leadership.
- Strengthening Institutional Support Systems - Over the next five years, structured systems must enable women to lead not just politically but also within governance and institutions, ensuring that representation translates into results.
- Rethinking Policy Design and Delivery - Policies must become simpler, faster, and more responsive, with strong feedback mechanisms to adapt to changing needs. Success should be measured by real outcomes, not just coverage.
- Central Role in India’s Development Vision - Women’s participation is critical to achieving India’s 2047 developed nation goal, as it directly impacts economic growth, social stability, and institutional effectiveness.
- Transforming Growth Through Inclusion - By ensuring access, participation, and leadership, India can not only empower women but also reshape its development trajectory, making implementation the key priority ahead.
Conclusion
- India’s progress in women’s empowerment is significant, but its success will depend on strengthening implementation, building leadership capacity, and ensuring inclusive participation to drive sustainable and transformative growth.
Article
10 Apr 2026
Why in the News?
- Clashes in Odisha over a proposed bauxite mining project have brought attention to resource distribution and tribal rights.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Bauxite Distribution (World, India, Significance, etc.)
- News Summary
Bauxite Distribution in the World
- Bauxite is the primary ore of aluminium and is widely distributed across tropical and subtropical regions.
- Globally, major bauxite reserves are concentrated in:
- Australia: The largest producer and exporter, with high-quality reserves.
- Guinea (West Africa): Holds some of the world’s largest reserves.
- Brazil: Significant producer with large deposits in the Amazon basin.
- China: Major producer, though with relatively lower-grade reserves.
- Indonesia and Jamaica: Important contributors to global supply.
- The distribution is influenced by climatic conditions, as bauxite forms through intense weathering of rocks in hot and humid environments.
Bauxite Distribution in India
- India is among the top producers of bauxite globally, with deposits mainly located in plateau and hill regions. Key features of distribution include:
- Odisha: The largest producer and holder of reserves, accounting for a major share of India’s total resources.
- Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat: Significant reserves and production centres.
- Jharkhand, Maharashtra, and Chhattisgarh: Important secondary producers.
- Bauxite deposits in India are largely found in the Eastern Ghats, Western Ghats, and the central plateau regions.
- The ore is crucial for aluminium production, which is widely used in transportation, construction, packaging, and electrical industries due to its lightweight and conductive properties.
Significance of Bauxite
- Bauxite plays a strategic role in industrial and economic development.
- It is the raw material for aluminium production.
- Aluminium is essential for infrastructure, aviation, electronics, and renewable energy sectors.
- It contributes to export earnings and industrial growth.
- However, mining activities often lead to environmental degradation and social conflicts, especially in tribal regions.
News Summary
- Clashes occurred between tribal villagers and police in Odisha’s Rayagada district over a bauxite mining project, leaving several injured.
- The conflict centres around the construction of a 3 km approach road to the Sijimali bauxite mine, which has been allotted to Vedanta Limited.
- Villagers alleged that police conducted raids and used force to suppress protests, while authorities stated that action was taken to maintain law and order.
- The tribals have opposed the project due to concerns over displacement, loss of livelihoods, and lack of proper consultation. They claim that Gram Sabha approvals were obtained fraudulently, whereas the administration maintains that due process under the Forest Rights Act was followed.
- The project has received Stage-1 forest clearance from the central government, which is a conditional approval requiring compliance with environmental safeguards such as compensatory afforestation.
- The Sijimali region in the Eastern Ghats contains an estimated 311 million tonnes of high-grade bauxite spread over 1,500 hectares across Rayagada and Kalahandi districts.
- The site is strategically located near Vedanta’s Lanjigarh alumina refinery, which has a production capacity of 5 million tonnes per annum.
Odisha’s Role in Bauxite Production
- The report highlights Odisha’s importance in India’s bauxite sector. According to the Indian Bureau of Mines (2022), Odisha accounts for 41% of India’s bauxite resources and about 73% of production in 2021-22.
- Bauxite is refined into alumina, which is then used to produce aluminium.
- Aluminium is widely used due to its strength, light weight, and conductivity, making it essential for industries ranging from packaging to aerospace.
- The current protests are not unprecedented. The earlier Niyamgiri mining project faced strong opposition from the Dongria Kondh tribal community, leading to the rejection of mining proposals after Gram Sabha consultations and a Supreme Court judgment in 2013.
Issues and Challenges
- The Odisha conflict reflects broader challenges in resource governance.
- Tribal Rights vs Development: Balancing economic development with indigenous rights remains difficult.
- Environmental Concerns: Mining in ecologically sensitive areas threatens biodiversity.
- Governance Gaps: Allegations of improper consultation weaken trust in institutions.
- Legal Framework: Implementation of the Forest Rights Act and environmental laws remains contested.
Article
10 Apr 2026
Why in News?
- With the commencement of the Sixteenth Finance Commission (2026–31) award period from April 1, there is renewed focus on fiscal decentralisation and the growing financial empowerment of Rural Local Bodies (RLBs).
- Trends from previous Finance Commissions indicate a steady increase in both allocation and utilisation of funds for Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs).
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Evolution of Grants to Rural Local Bodies
- Allocation Framework of the 16th Finance Commission (2026–31)
- Key Implications of the 16th FC Framework for Governance
- Challenges
- Way Forward
- Conclusion
Evolution of Grants to Rural Local Bodies:
- Historical trajectory:
- Grants to RLBs began from the 10th Finance Commission, marking institutional support for grassroots governance.
- Fund release efficiency has steadily improved - 13th Finance Commission (90.5%), 14th Finance Commission (91%).
- Key highlights of the 15th Finance Commission (2020–26):
- Total recommended grants: ₹2,97,555 crore.
- Total released: ₹2,82,632 crore (with highest ever fund release efficiency - 94.94%).
- Peak release rate: With release of grant peaking at a historic high of 94.98%.
- Top-performing states (100% utilisation): Assam, Kerala, Mizoram, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh.
- Significance of improved fund utilisation: Reflects stronger cooperative federalism, enhances institutional capacity of PRIs under Article 243G, enables need-based local development, and improves delivery of essential civic services in rural areas.
- Article 243G (powers and responsibilities): Panchayats are empowered to prepare plans for economic development and social justice. They function in matters (29) listed in the Eleventh Schedule.
Allocation Framework of the 16th Finance Commission (2026–31):
- Total grants and composition:
- The 16th Finance Commission has recommended a grant of Rs 4.35 lakh crore to rural local bodies for its award period (2026-27 to 2030-31).
- Of this, Rs 3.48 crore will be the basic grant, Rs 43,524 crore the rural local body performance grant, and Rs 43,524 crore the state performance grant.
- Distribution pattern: Of the total grant, 90% will be given to gram panchayats, while block and district panchayats will each receive 10%.
- Criteria for Inter-State distribution: Among the states, the grant will be distributed based on each state’s projected rural population for 2026 and its total area.
- Year-wise allocation: This shows that the states will receive Rs 55,909 crore as rural local body grants in 2026-27, Rs 71,300 crore in 2027-28, Rs 92,166 crore in 2028-29, Rs 102,303 crore in 2029-30, and Rs 113,558 crore in 2030-31.
Key Implications of the 16th FC Framework for Governance:
- Strengthening decentralisation: It reinforces the 73rd Constitutional Amendment, and empowers local self-governments as units of planning and implementation.
- Improved service delivery: It will result in better provisioning of drinking water, sanitation, rural infrastructure, and local welfare services.
- Enhanced accountability: For example, performance-based grants promote transparency, and outcome-oriented governance.
Challenges:
- Capacity constraints: For instance, many Panchayats lack technical expertise, and administrative capacity.
- Uneven utilisation across States: While some states achieve full utilisation, others lag due to weak institutional frameworks, and delayed implementation.
- Dependence on grants: Limited own-source revenue of Panchayats reduces fiscal autonomy.
- Monitoring and accountability issues: Risks of fund misallocation, and weak auditing mechanisms.
Way Forward:
- Strengthening local capacity: Training and capacity-building for Panchayat officials. Use of digital tools for governance.
- Enhancing fiscal autonomy: Promote local taxation powers. Encourage own revenue generation mechanisms.
- Robust monitoring mechanisms: Social audits and real-time tracking of fund utilisation. Strengthening institutions like State Finance Commissions.
- Incentivising performance: Expand and refine performance-linked grants. Reward efficient and transparent Panchayats.
- Deepening cooperative federalism: Strengthen Centre-State-Local coordination. Ensure timely and predictable fund flows.
Conclusion:
- The increasing allocation and high utilisation of funds for Rural Local Bodies signal a decisive shift towards deepening grassroots democracy and fiscal decentralisation in India.
- The 16th Finance Commission builds on this trajectory with an ambitious outlay, but its success will hinge on strengthening institutional capacity, ensuring accountability, and enabling Panchayats to emerge as truly self-reliant units of governance.
Article
10 Apr 2026
Context
- India’s ambition to raise its Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) in higher education to 50% requires more than expanding institutional capacity; it demands ensuring that students can access, afford, and complete education.
- Despite the increase in institutions from 51,534 to over 70,000, enrolment remains at 29.5%, revealing that capacity expansion alone does not ensure participation.
- True transformation lies in addressing access, affordability, and quality, with scholarships playing a central role.
Beyond Infrastructure: The Real Barriers to Participation
- The higher education system faces three interlinked challenges: unequal access across regions and communities, rising cost burden on families, and concerns over academic quality and outcomes.
- For many students, especially from smaller towns, the issue is not lack of aspiration but the financial risk associated with higher education.
- Enrolment rises only when students who qualify are able to afford participation and when institutions value diversity as a strength.
- Unlocking untapped talent requires reducing barriers of cost, distance, and uncertainty.
Scholarships as Transformative Instruments
- Scholarships must evolve from limited financial aids into structured pathways that support students holistically.
- They should not remain mere financial support mechanisms but function as tools for mentorship, leadership development, career guidance, and holistic growth.
- Government initiatives such as the National Scholarship Portal, interest subsidies, and the Central Sector Scheme provide a foundation, while private philanthropy, corporate foundations, and non-profits contribute through merit-cum-means programmes.
- However, their limited scale and fragmented design restrict impact. Scholarships must become long-term, aspirational opportunities integrated into the academic ecosystem.
Lessons from History and Contemporary Practice
- India’s historical model at Takshashila demonstrated flexible approaches to financing education.
- It included deferred payments, work-based learning, and community support, ensuring that ability was not constrained by lack of means. This principle remains relevant today.
- Contemporary institutions such as Ashoka University and the Indian School of Business (ISB) illustrate how robust scholarship systems can promote inclusivity while maintaining academic excellence.
- By separating admissions from financial evaluation and building strong donor-backed ecosystems, these institutions integrate scholarships into their core identity.
- Globally, U.S. universities and regional models in China align scholarships with development priorities, embedding them within institutional culture.
The Way Forward: Toward a Scholarship-Centric Ecosystem
- A forward-looking approach requires reimagining scholarships as strategic tools aligned with national and regional needs.
- Multi-year funding can ensure financial stability, while region-based schemes can target underserved areas.
- Linking scholarships to sectors like artificial intelligence, healthcare, and advanced manufacturing can improve employability and address skill gaps.
- Policy support is essential. Measures such as tax incentives for endowments, matching funds for private contributions, and performance-linked frameworks can attract sustained investment and reward institutions promoting merit, equity, and potential.
- Strengthening institutional commitment to scholarships will enhance both access and outcomes.
Conclusion
- Achieving a 50% GER requires building an inclusive ecosystem where capable students are supported to succeed.
- Scholarships lie at the intersection of equity, quality, and growth, shaping who enters, persists, and excels in higher education.
- Placing scholarships at the centre of higher education strategy can unlock social mobility, harness human capital, and strengthen national capability.
- By transforming scholarships into comprehensive pathways, India can move beyond expansion toward a more equitable and effective system of higher learning.
Online Test
10 Apr 2026
CAMP-MH-01
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
10 Apr 2026
CAMP-MH-01
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.