list of 12 schedules of the Indian Constitution

Page 1

List of 12 Schedules of Indian Constitution indianconstitutions.com/schedules-of-indian-constitution hari

June 1, 2020

Introduction (Schedules of Indian Constitution) There is a list of 12 schedules of the Indian Constitution. one of the primary mentions schedules was made within the government of India act,1935 wherever it included 10 schedules. later, when, the Indian constitution was adopted in 1949. it consisted of 8 schedules. today, with the amendment in Indian constitution, there is a total of 12 schedules of Indian Constitution. India is a sovereign, democratic, republic with a parliamentary system of government it took 2 years and 11 months and 18 days for the constitution to be written on 26 November 1949. the constitution was universally accepted by the constituent assembly. the constitution came to be an effect of January 26, 1950. several changes have been made to the constitution from time to time the original constitution becomes with the preamble which the introduction to the constitution. Originally, the constitution had 395 articles in 22 parts and 8 schedules. As of January 2018 (101 amendments) have been made to the constitution. currently, the constitution has 25 parts with 448 articles,12 schedules, and 5 appendices.

1/5


Schedules of Indian Constitution Numbers First Schedule

Subject Matter 1. Names of the State and their territorial jurisdiction. 2. Names of the Union Territories and their extent.

Articles Covered 1 and 4

2/5


Second Schedule

The provision relating to the emoluments, allowances, privileges, and so on of: 1. The president of India 2. The Governors of States 3. The Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok sabha. 4. The Chairman and the Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. 5. The speaker and deputy speaker of the Legislative Assembly in the states. 6. The Chairman and Deputy Chairman of the legislative council in the states. 7. The judges of the Supreme court. 8. The judges of the high court. 9. The Comptroller and Auditor General of India.

59,65,75,97, 125,148,158, 164,186 and 221

Third Forms of Oath or Affirmation for: Schedules 1. The Union Ministers 2. The candidate for election to the parliament 3. The members of parliament 4. The judges of supreme court 5. The Comptroller and Auditor General of India 6. The state ministers 7. The candidate for election to the state legislature 8. The members of the state legislature 9. The judges of the High Court.

75,84,99,124, 146,173,188

Fourth Schedule

4 and 80

Allocation of seats in Rajya Sabha to the states and union territories

and 219

Fifth Provision relating to the Administration and Schedules Control of schedule Areas and Scheduled Tribes.

244

Sixth Schedule

244 and 275

Provision related to the administration of tribal areas in the state of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram.

3/5


Seventh Schedule

Division of powers between the Union and State in terms of the list I (Union List) list II (state list) list third (concurrent list) Presently, the Union list contains 100 subjects (originally 97). the state list contains 61 subjects (originally 66) and the concurrent list contains 52 subjects (originally 47).

246

Eight Schedule

Languages recognized by the constitution. Originally it had 14 languages but presently there are 22 languages. there are Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, Dogri (Dongri), Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Mathili (Maithili), Malayalam, Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Odia, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Santhali, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu. Sindhi was added by the 21st Amendment Act 1967. Konkani, Manipuri, and Nepali were are added by the 71st Amendment Act of 1992, and Bodo, Dongri, Maithili, and Santhali were added by the 92nd Amendment Act 2003, Oriya was renamed as Odia by the 96th Amendment Act 2011.

344 and 351

Ninth Schedule

Act and regulation (originally 13 however presently 282) of the state legislature dealing with the land reforms and abolition of the zamindari system and of the Parliament dealing with other matters. this schedule was added by the 1st amendment (1951) to guard the laws included in it from judicial scrutiny on the bottom of violation of fundamental rights. however, in 2007, the Supreme Court ruled that the law included in this schedule after April 24, 1973, are now open to judicial review.

31-B

Tenth Schedule

Provision relating to disqualifications of the members of Parliament and State Legislatures on the ground of defection. This schedule was added by the 52nd Amendment Act of 1985, also known as Anti-defection Law

102 and 191

Eleventh Schedule

Specifies the power, authority, and responsibilities of Panchayats. it has 29 matters. This schedule was added by the 73rd Amendment Act 1992.

243-G

Twelfth Schedule

Specifies the Powers, authority, and responsibilities of municipalities, It has 18 matters. This schedule was added by the 74th Amendment Act of 1992.

243-W

4/5


For more Notes and References visit – https://www.indianconstitutions.com/ Article 15 of indian constitution Article 16 of Indian Constitution Article 21 of Indian Constitution Article 20 of Indian Constitution

5/5


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.