Indian constitution is the inclusion of federal unitary
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The Constitution of India establishes a federal structure to the Indian government, declaring it to be a "Union of States". Part XI of the Indian constitutionspecifies the distribution of legislative, administrative and executive powers between the Central government and the States of India.The legislative powers are categorised under a Union List, a State List and a Concurrent List, representing, respectively, the powers conferred upon the Union government, those conferred upon the State governments and powers shared among them.
This federalism is asymmetric in that the devolved powers of the constituent units are not all the same. The state of Jammu and Kashmir was accorded a higher degree of autonomy than other States under Article 370. Union Territories are unitary type, directly governed by the Union government of the constitution stipulates two tier-governance with an additional local elected government. Delhiand Puducherry were accorded legislatures under Article 239AA and 239A, respectively.
Answer:
Indian constitution is the inclusion of federal unitary as it is neither entirely federal nor unitary. Indian constitution can be said to be unitary as the central governments hold more power and there is prevalence of only a single constitution. Also the "supreme court" is at the "apex of power" in the judiciary and there is only one system of judiciary. There is decentralisation of power or there are many tiers of governance which is a feature of federalism.