History, asked by jhnhhbhf, 2 months ago

Theory and practice of Indian ferdelism

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Answered by MysticalRainbow
3

Answer:

Federalism in India refers to relations between the Centre and the States of the Union of India. The Constitution of India establishes the structure of the Indian government. ... This federalism is symmetrical in that the devolved powers of the constituent units are envisioned to be the same.

Answered by SCIENTIFIGENIOUS
2

Answer:

the creation of linguistic States was the first and major test for democratic politics in our country

many all states are banished and many new states are being created areas boundaries and names of the states have been changed in 1947 the boundaries of seventh all state was changed in order to create new states this was done to ensure that people who spoke the same language and lived in the same state some states were created not on the basis of language but to recognise difference based on culture ethnicity or geography these include states like Nagaland Uttarakhand and Jharkhand

language policy:a second test for Indian federation is the language policy.our constitution did not give the status of natural language to any one language in the was identified as official language but Hindi is the mother tongue of only 40% of Indians therefore there are many safeguards to protect other languages besides Hindi they are 21 languages recognised as scheduled languages by constitution

centre state relations:restructuring the central state relations is one way in which federalism has been strengthened in practice since 1997 government at the centre in a party got a clear majority in the lok sabha the major national parties have to enter in an alliance with many political parties including several regional parties to form a government at the centre.

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