State Reorganisation · Federalism · Centre-State Relations

State Reorganisation · Federalism · Centre-State Relations | UPSC Prelims 2026 | Legacy IAS Bengaluru
Art. 3Reorganisation Power
10Sch. V States
6Sch. VI States (NE)
97Union List Entries
66State List Entries
47Concurrent List Entries

State Reorganisation — Art. 2, 3 & 4

Art. 2
Admission & Establishment of New States
Parliament’s power to bring new territories into the Union
Core Provisions
  • Art. 2 covers TWO distinct situations: (a) Admission of an existing state from outside India; (b) Establishment of a totally new state in territories not previously part of India
  • Requires only a simple majority law — not a Constitutional Amendment under Art. 368
  • Examples: Pondicherry (1962), Sikkim (1975) — both admitted under Art. 2
  • Territories acquired by India from other countries can be formed into states via Art. 2
⚑ PYQ Trap
Art. 2 is NOT the same as Art. 3. Art. 2 = NEW states from outside territories. Art. 3 = reorganising EXISTING states. The distinction is often blurred in options. Sikkim’s admission = Art. 2, not Art. 3.
Art. 3
Reorganisation of Existing States — The Full Procedure
Parliament’s power to reshape India’s internal territorial map — PYQ: 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
What Parliament CAN Do Under Art. 3
  • Form a new state by separation of territory from an existing state, or by uniting two or more states/parts of states
  • Increase the area of any state
  • Diminish the area of any state
  • Alter the boundaries of any state
  • Alter the name of any state
Step-by-Step Procedure
1
Bill introduced in either House of Parliament (not just LS)
2
President refers bill to affected State Legislature for opinion
3
State gives opinion within prescribed time limit (set by President)
4
Parliament considers opinion — NOT BINDING — can proceed regardless
5
Bill passed by simple majority → Presidential assent
⚑ PYQ Trap Cluster — Art. 3
  • State Legislature’s opinion is NOT binding on Parliament — Parliament can override it. PYQ 2022.
  • State’s consent is NOT required — only its opinion must be sought. Critical distinction.
  • Bill can be introduced in EITHER House — it is NOT restricted to Lok Sabha. PYQ 2024.
  • No time limit on Parliament to act after receiving state’s opinion.
  • President’s recommendation is required to introduce the bill — unlike normal bills. A bill for reorganisation cannot be introduced without Presidential recommendation even by a private member.
  • If Parliament amends the bill after reference to State Legislature, it need NOT be re-referred to the State Legislature (SC settled this).
🔵 Historical Examples for Context
  • States Reorganisation Act 1956 — major linguistic reorganisation; created 14 states and 6 UTs
  • Punjab Reorganisation Act 1966 — divided Punjab into Punjab, Haryana, Himachal (UT); Chandigarh as UT
  • Telangana (2014) — separated from Andhra Pradesh; Andhra Legislature opposed but Parliament proceeded — classic Art. 3 example
  • J&K Reorganisation Act 2019 — bifurcated J&K into two UTs (J&K with legislature, Ladakh without)
Art. 4
Nature of Laws Under Art. 2 & 3 — The Constitutional Amendment Confusion
Why reorganisation laws are NOT Constitutional Amendments — PYQ: 2022, 2024
Key Legal Character
  • A law made under Art. 2 or Art. 3 is NOT a Constitutional Amendment under Art. 368 — even if it amends Schedule I (list of states) or Schedule IV (allocation of RS seats)
  • Such laws require only a simple majority — not the special majority required for Art. 368
  • Such laws are NOT called “Constitutional Amendment Acts” — they are ordinary parliamentary enactments
  • Art. 4 specifically says: laws under Art. 2 & 3 shall contain such supplemental, incidental, and consequential provisions as Parliament deems necessary — including amendment of Schedules I and IV
❌ Common Error
Many students assume that because a reorganisation law changes Schedule I of the Constitution (which lists the states), it must be a Constitutional Amendment Act requiring special majority. Art. 4 explicitly negates this — it is just an ordinary law. PYQ 2022, 2024.

Fifth Schedule — Scheduled & Tribal Areas

5th Sch.
Fifth Schedule — Administration of Scheduled Areas & Scheduled Tribes
Art. 244(1) — PYQ: 2019, 2022, 2023, 2025 — HIGH FREQUENCY
Geographic Coverage
  • Applies to states (other than Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram which have Sixth Schedule): 10 states currently have Fifth Schedule areas — Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Rajasthan, Telangana
  • Scheduled Areas are notified by the PRESIDENT by Order — NOT by State Govt, NOT by Governor
  • President can declare, increase, decrease, alter, or rescind Scheduled Areas — always by Order
Executive Authority — The Governor’s Role
  • Governor has special responsibility for administration of Scheduled Areas — acts in personal discretion, not on CoM advice, for this purpose
  • Governor submits annual report on administration of Scheduled Areas to the President
  • Union executive can give directions to the State regarding administration of Scheduled Areas
  • Governor CAN direct that any Central or State law shall NOT apply to a Scheduled Area or shall apply with modifications
  • Governor CAN make Regulations for the Scheduled Area — requires assent of President (not just CoM)
Tribes Advisory Council (TAC)
  • Every state with Scheduled Areas shall have a Tribes Advisory Council — mandatory
  • Consists of not more than 20 members
  • At least 3/4th of members must be STs — they are members of the state legislature representing ST constituencies
  • Advises on welfare and advancement of STs — advisory role only, NOT binding
  • A state without Scheduled Areas may also have a TAC if President so directs
PESA Act 1996 — Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas)
  • Extends panchayati raj to Fifth Schedule areas with modifications — statutory law, NOT part of Fifth Schedule itself
  • Recognises Gram Sabha as the foundation of governance in Scheduled Areas
  • State laws must be in conformity with customary law, traditions, and community resources of STs
  • Gram Sabha must approve plans, programmes, and projects for social/economic development
  • Mandates consultation of Gram Sabha before land acquisition in Scheduled Areas
⚑ PYQ Trap Cluster — Fifth Schedule
  • President notifies Scheduled Areas — NOT Governor, NOT State Govt. PYQ 2023, 2025.
  • TAC must have at least 3/4th ST members — not 2/3rd, not 1/2. PYQ 2023.
  • TAC is advisory only — its recommendations are NOT binding.
  • PESA is a statutory law — it is NOT part of the Fifth Schedule itself.
  • Governor’s regulations for Scheduled Areas need President’s assent, not CoM advice.
  • Fifth Schedule areas are in mainland India only — Northeast tribal areas are covered by Sixth Schedule.
  • The Samatha Judgment (1997) — SC held mining leases in Scheduled Areas to companies violate Fifth Schedule; only state/tribal cooperatives can get leases. Important for ecology PYQs.

Sixth Schedule — Autonomous Tribal Districts (Northeast)

6th Sch.
Sixth Schedule — Autonomous Districts & Regional Councils
Art. 244(2) — Applies to Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram — PYQ: 2015, 2019, 2021, 2023
Fifth Schedule (Comparison)
Mainland Tribal Areas
  • Applies to 10 states in mainland India
  • Scheduled Areas notified by President
  • Governor has special role; annual report to President
  • Governor’s regulations need Presidential assent
  • TAC — advisory body
  • No autonomous districts or councils
  • Gram Sabha empowered under PESA
Sixth Schedule (NE Tribal Areas)
Northeast — Autonomous Structure
  • Applies to: Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram
  • Tribal areas divided into Autonomous Districts
  • Several tribes → sub-divided into Autonomous Regions
  • District Councils — LEGISLATIVE and EXECUTIVE powers
  • Governor modifies/divides/merge autonomous districts by ORDER
  • District Councils can make laws on specific subjects with Governor’s assent
  • District Councils have their own courts for trial of certain offences
Sixth Schedule — Legislative Powers of District Councils
  • District Councils can make laws on: land management, forests (other than reserved), use of waterways, regulation of shifting cultivation, establishment and management of educational institutions, money lending, trading by non-tribals
  • Such laws require assent of the Governor to have effect — Governor can withhold assent or refer to President
  • District Councils can assess and collect land revenue and impose certain taxes
  • District Councils can constitute Village Courts for trial of offences involving tribals — Governor specifies which offences
⚑ PYQ Trap Cluster — Fifth vs Sixth Comparison
  • Fifth Schedule = mainland tribal areas; Sixth Schedule = NORTHEAST only. This is the most common confusion.
  • Fifth Schedule has NO autonomous districts or councils. Sixth Schedule DOES have District and Regional Councils with legislative powers.
  • In Fifth Schedule, Governor notifies regulations (Presidential assent needed). In Sixth Schedule, District Councils make laws (Governor’s assent needed). Different authority levels.
  • Sixth Schedule areas are NOT called “Scheduled Areas” — they are called “Tribal Areas” in the Constitution. Fifth Schedule areas are called “Scheduled Areas.” PYQ 2021.
  • Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC) — created under Sixth Schedule in Assam; often confused as a Fifth Schedule entity.

Indian Federalism — Features & Quasi-Federal Nature

T17
Why India is Quasi-Federal — Federal vs Unitary Features
K.C. Wheare called India “quasi-federal” — PYQ: 2017, 2021, 2025
Federal vs Unitary — India’s Dual Character
✅ Federal Features
  • Written Constitution (rigid & supreme)
  • Division of powers — Sch. VII (Union, State, Concurrent Lists)
  • Independent judiciary (SC at apex)
  • Bicameral legislature at Centre (LS + RS)
  • Supremacy of Constitution
  • Bicameral in most states (though not all)
❌ Unitary/Anti-Federal Features
  • Single Constitution (no separate state constitutions)
  • Single citizenship (not dual like USA)
  • India described as “Union of States” — NOT federation
  • Parliament can alter state boundaries without consent (Art. 3)
  • Emergency provisions — Centre takes over state powers
  • Governor appointed by Centre — Centre’s agent in state
  • RS: states have unequal representation (not equal like US Senate)
  • Single unified judiciary — states don’t have separate court systems
  • IAS/IPS serve both Centre and States — Centre controls cadres
  • Parliament can legislate on State List in national interest (Art. 249)
  • Residuary powers with Centre (Art. 248) — unlike USA where residuary with states
🔵 Scholar Terminology — Know Who Said What
  • K.C. Wheare — called India “quasi-federal” (federal in form, unitary in spirit)
  • Granville Austin — “cooperative federalism” (Centre-state partnership)
  • Dr. B.R. Ambedkar — described as “union of states” to emphasise indestructibility; states cannot secede
  • Ivor Jennings — described as “federation with strong centralising tendency”
  • SR Bommai case (1994) — SC affirmed federalism as BASIC STRUCTURE — Centre cannot destroy federal character
⚑ PYQ Trap — Federalism
  • India is NOT a federation of states — it is a “Union of States.” States cannot secede. PYQ 2021.
  • Residuary powers are with CENTRE (Art. 248) — NOT with states. Opposite of US model. PYQ 2017.
  • States have NO separate constitutions — there is one Constitution for the whole country. Unlike the USA.
  • India has single citizenship only — no separate state citizenship. Unlike USA and Australia.
  • Federalism is part of BASIC STRUCTURE — Parliament cannot destroy it even by amendment. SR Bommai 1994. PYQ 2022.

Seventh Schedule — Union, State & Concurrent Lists

Sch. VII
Art. 246 — Division of Legislative Powers Among Three Lists
The backbone of Centre-State relations — PYQ: 2013, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2023, 2024
Union List — List I
97
Entries (Parliament ONLY)
  • Defence, armed forces
  • Foreign affairs, treaties
  • Atomic energy
  • Railways, airways, shipping
  • Currency, coinage, banking
  • Income tax (other than agri)
  • Customs, excise duties
  • Citizenship, naturalisation
State List — List II
66
Entries (State Legislature)
  • Public order, police
  • Land, agriculture
  • Local government
  • Public health, hospitals
  • Liquor (intoxicating)
  • Betting and gambling
  • Entertainment, taxes
  • Prisons, reformatories
Concurrent List — List III
47
Entries (Parliament + States)
  • Criminal law, procedure
  • Civil procedure, courts
  • Marriage, divorce
  • Education (after 42nd CAA)
  • Forests (after 42nd CAA)
  • Electricity
  • Labour welfare, trade unions
  • Bankruptcy, insolvency
Key Rules for Conflicts & Special Situations
  • Repugnancy Rule (Art. 254): In Concurrent List, if State law conflicts with Central law → Central law prevails to extent of repugnancy. BUT if State law receives Presidential assent, it prevails over Central law in that state
  • Residuary Powers (Art. 248): Parliament alone can legislate on matters NOT in any list — residuary power is with Centre, not states. This is unlike USA/Australia where residuary is with states
  • Art. 249: RS can empower Parliament to legislate on State List by 2/3rd majority — for 1 year (renewable) in national interest — exclusive RS power
  • Art. 250: During National Emergency, Parliament can legislate on State List subjects
  • Art. 252: Two or more states can pass resolutions requesting Parliament to make law on a State List subject — that law applies only to those states
  • Art. 253: Parliament can legislate on State List to implement international treaties/agreements — override of state power for treaty obligations
⚑ PYQ Trap — Seventh Schedule
  • Education and Forests were MOVED from State List to Concurrent List by 42nd CAA (1976). Before 1976, they were in State List. PYQ 2019.
  • Public order is in State List, NOT Concurrent List. Common trap — law & order = state subject. PYQ 2024.
  • State law on Concurrent subject CAN prevail if it gets Presidential assent — even over an earlier Central law. PYQ 2017.
  • There is NO List IV or residuary list — residuary power goes to Centre under Art. 248, not a 4th list. PYQ 2013.
  • Banking is in Union List, NOT Concurrent List — though RBI regulates banks. PYQ trap.
  • Marriage and divorce is in Concurrent List — NOT State List. Parliament CAN make uniform civil code on it. PYQ 2021.

Centre–State Relations — Legislative, Executive & Financial

Part XI
Legislative Relations Between Centre and States
Art. 245–255 — PYQ: 2017, 2021, 2023
Territorial Extent of Laws
  • Art. 245: Parliament may make laws for whole or any part of India; State legislature may make laws for whole or any part of the State
  • Parliament can make laws with extra-territorial operation — laws can govern Indian citizens outside India; states cannot make extra-territorial laws
  • Art. 246: Subject matter of laws — Parliament exclusive on Union List; concurrent on Concurrent List; states on State List
When Parliament Can Legislate on State List
  • Art. 249: Rajya Sabha resolution by 2/3rd majority (national interest) → Parliament legislates on State List for 1 year (renewable). Exclusive RS power
  • Art. 250: National Emergency (Art. 352) in operation → Parliament can legislate on State List. Ceases 6 months after Emergency ends
  • Art. 252: Two or more states pass resolutions → Parliament legislates on State List for those states only
  • Art. 253: Implementation of international treaties/agreements — Parliament can legislate on ANY subject including State List
  • Art. 356 (President’s Rule): Parliament can legislate for the state when President’s Rule is in operation
Executive Relations (Art. 256–263)
  • Art. 256: State executive must exercise its executive powers to ensure compliance with Central laws — Centre can give directions to states
  • Art. 257: Centre can give directions to states for certain purposes — including construction and maintenance of means of communication of national/military importance
  • Art. 258: Centre CAN entrust executive functions to states (or state officers) with consent — delegation of executive power
  • Art. 261: Full faith and credit — public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every state shall be given full faith and credit throughout India
  • Art. 262: Parliament can provide for adjudication of inter-state river water disputes — NO jurisdiction of SC or any court. Inter-State River Water Disputes Act 1956 enacted under this
Financial Relations (Art. 264–293)
  • Finance Commission (Art. 280): Constitutional body — constituted every 5 years by President; recommends distribution of tax proceeds between Centre and states, and grants-in-aid to states
  • GST Council (Art. 279A — added by 101st CAA 2016): Constitutional body — recommends rates, exemptions, model GST law. Chairperson = Union Finance Minister; 2/3rd majority of weighted votes required for decisions. Key reform: unified tax base
  • Art. 293: States can borrow within India — but need Centre’s consent if any outstanding loan from Centre exists
⚑ PYQ Trap Cluster — Centre-State Relations
  • Art. 262 explicitly EXCLUDES Supreme Court jurisdiction from inter-state river water disputes. SC cannot interfere. PYQ 2023.
  • Finance Commission is CONSTITUTIONAL (Art. 280). GST Council is also now constitutional (Art. 279A after 101st CAA). NITI Aayog is executive (replaced Planning Commission which was also executive). PYQ 2025.
  • Centre’s directions to states (Art. 256/257) are mandatory — states are bound to comply with Central executive directions. Failure → grounds for Art. 356.
  • GST Council decisions are recommendatory, NOT binding — held by SC in Mohit Minerals case (2022). Major PYQ trap going forward.
  • Art. 252 laws apply ONLY to consenting states — other states not bound. But if another state passes a resolution later, the law extends to it too.

Inter-State Council vs Zonal Councils vs NSC

Art. 263
Three Key Coordination Bodies — Constitutional vs Statutory vs Executive
HIGH FREQUENCY — PYQ: 2017, 2021, 2025 — most asked comparison in Polity
Feature Inter-State Council Zonal Councils National Security Council
Nature CONSTITUTIONAL — Art. 263 STATUTORY — States Reorganisation Act 1956 NEITHER — Executive Order only
Established by President (by Order, 1990) States Reorganisation Act 1956 (Parliament) Cabinet Secretariat notification (1998)
Chairperson Prime Minister Union Home Minister (for all 5 zones) Prime Minister
Purpose Inquiring/discussing/recommending on inter-state disputes, Centre-State relations Fostering inter-state cooperation, harmonious Centre-State relations in region Strategic affairs, national security planning
Binding Power Advisory/recommendatory only Advisory only Advisory to Cabinet
Number ONE — whole country FIVE — Northern, Southern, Eastern, Western, Central ONE — whole country
Frequency Rarely meets (often inactive for years) Meets periodically As needed on security matters
Sarkaria Commission Recommendations (1988) — Centre-State
  • Recommended Inter-State Council be set up — it was set up in 1990 on ISC’s recommendation
  • Art. 356 (President’s Rule) should be used as a last resort — only when constitutional machinery has broken down irretrievably
  • Governor should be an eminent person from outside the state — not a politician; should be a detached figure
  • No incumbent Governor should be reappointed to the same state or any other state
  • Centre should consult Chief Ministers before appointing Governors of their states
Punchhi Commission Recommendations (2010)
  • Governor’s term should be fixed at 5 years — removal only by process as prescribed, not at Centre’s will
  • Art. 355 (Centre’s duty to protect states) should be amended — Centre should intervene in part of a state, not invoke Art. 356 for whole state
  • Inter-governmental transfers and fiscal federalism need strengthening
⚑ PYQ Trap — ISC vs Zonal Councils vs NSC
  • ISC = Constitutional (Art. 263). Zonal Councils = Statutory. NSC = Neither (executive order). The ONLY constitutional body of the three is ISC. PYQ 2025.
  • Art. 263 only ENABLES the President to create ISC — it does NOT automatically create it. The ISC was actually created only in 1990. PYQ 2017.
  • Zonal Councils are chaired by Union Home Minister — NOT by PM. ISC is chaired by PM. PYQ 2021.
  • ISC is purely advisory — it has no power to enforce or adjudicate. Its recommendations are not binding on states.
  • There are 5 Zonal Councils — do NOT confuse with 6 zones or 4 zones. The 5 zones: Northern, Southern, Eastern, Western, Central. (Northeast states are in Eastern zone.)
  • Planning Commission (abolished 2014) was NEITHER constitutional NOR statutory — it was an executive body. NITI Aayog (its replacement) is also executive. PYQ 2021.

Key Landmark Cases

SR Bommai v Union of India
1994 · 9-Judge Bench
  • Federalism = Basic Structure — Parliament cannot destroy it
  • Art. 356 (President’s Rule) is subject to judicial review — courts can examine its validity
  • Secularism = Basic Structure — secular state cannot impose theocracy
  • President’s Rule: floor test must be conducted if CM claims majority — not solely Governor’s report
  • Dissolution of state assembly under Art. 356 irreversible by SC — but compensation possible
  • PYQ: 2017, 2022 — secularism basic structure; Art. 356 reviewable
State of West Bengal v Union of India
1962
  • SC held India is NOT a true federation — Parliament can legislate to acquire state property
  • Confirmed supremacy of Union in the constitutional scheme
  • States are NOT sovereign entities — they derive power from Constitution, not inherent sovereignty
Samatha v State of Andhra Pradesh
1997
  • Mining leases in Scheduled (Fifth Schedule) Areas cannot be given to non-tribal private companies
  • Only state government/statutory corporations or tribal cooperatives eligible for such leases
  • Fifth Schedule imposes obligation on state to protect tribal land rights
  • PYQ connection: tribal land alienation — Fifth Schedule protection
Mohit Minerals v Union of India
2022
  • SC held: GST Council recommendations are NOT binding on states — persuasive but not mandatory
  • Both Centre and states have equal, simultaneous power to legislate on GST
  • GST Council is a recommendatory/deliberative body, not a supervisory authority over states
  • PYQ relevance: GST Council powers — new and high relevance for 2026
Babulal Parate v State of Bombay
1960
  • SC upheld Parliament’s power to reorganise states without state consent under Art. 3
  • State legislature’s opinion under Art. 3 is NOT binding on Parliament
  • Confirmed Parliament’s plenary power to alter state boundaries, areas, and names
New Delhi Municipal Council v State of Punjab
1997
  • SC examined the constitutional distribution of legislative and executive powers
  • Reinforced that Centre-State relations operate within cooperative federalism framework
  • State cannot abdicate its duty to enforce Central laws within its territory

Master PYQ Trap Grid

🚨 24 High-Frequency UPSC Traps — State Reorganisation, Federalism & Centre-State

State Legislature’s opinion is binding on Parliament under Art. 3?
❌ NO — State’s opinion is sought but NOT binding. Parliament can and has overridden state opinions (Telangana 2014). PYQ 2022.
Art. 3 bill for state reorganisation can be introduced only in Lok Sabha?
❌ NO — Art. 3 bill can be introduced in EITHER House (LS or RS). No such restriction exists. PYQ 2024.
Altering state boundaries is a Constitutional Amendment under Art. 368?
❌ NO — Laws under Art. 2 and Art. 3 are NOT Constitutional Amendments. They require only simple majority even if Schedule I or IV is changed. Art. 4 makes this explicit. PYQ 2022, 2024.
State consent is required for Parliament to alter its boundaries?
❌ NO — Only opinion must be sought, not consent. Parliament can proceed against state wishes. Classic India vs true federation difference.
President’s prior recommendation is NOT needed to introduce an Art. 3 bill?
❌ TRAP — President’s RECOMMENDATION IS REQUIRED to introduce an Art. 3 bill (unlike most bills). This is a unique requirement for state reorganisation bills.
Scheduled Areas under Fifth Schedule are notified by the Governor?
❌ NO — Scheduled Areas are notified by the PRESIDENT by Order. Governor plays a reporting and regulatory role but does NOT notify Scheduled Areas. PYQ 2023, 2025.
Tribes Advisory Council can be compulsorily constituted in all states?
❌ PARTIALLY — States WITH Scheduled Areas MUST have a TAC. States without Scheduled Areas may have one only if President directs. Not automatic for all states.
TAC recommendations are binding on the State Government?
❌ NO — TAC is purely advisory. Its recommendations are NOT binding on state government. It advises; the state decides. PYQ trap on advisory vs mandatory.
Fifth Schedule and Sixth Schedule both apply to Assam, Meghalaya, and Mizoram?
❌ NO — Sixth Schedule applies to Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. Fifth Schedule does NOT apply to these states. The two schedules are mutually exclusive geographically. PYQ 2021.
Sixth Schedule tribal areas are called “Scheduled Areas”?
❌ NO — Sixth Schedule areas are called “Tribal Areas” in the Constitution. Only Fifth Schedule uses the term “Scheduled Areas.” Common confusion. PYQ 2021.
District Councils under Sixth Schedule can make laws without any external approval?
❌ NO — Laws made by District Councils require Governor’s assent to have effect. Governor can also withhold assent or reserve for President’s consideration. PYQ 2023.
India has residuary powers with states, like the USA?
❌ NO — In India, residuary powers are with the CENTRE (Art. 248). This is opposite to USA/Australia where residuary powers vest in states. PYQ 2017.
Education was always in the Concurrent List?
❌ NO — Education was originally in State List. It was moved to Concurrent List by the 42nd Constitutional Amendment (1976). Similarly, Forests were moved from State to Concurrent List. PYQ 2019.
Public Order is a subject in the Concurrent List?
❌ NO — Public Order (law and order) is in State List (Entry 1). Only the Centre can legislate on it in emergencies via Art. 250 or Art. 249. PYQ 2024.
State law on Concurrent List subject always yields to Central law?
❌ NO — If a State law on a Concurrent subject receives Presidential assent, it prevails over earlier Central law in that state (Art. 254(2)). The assent mechanism allows state override. PYQ 2017.
Inter-State Council is a statutory body created by States Reorganisation Act?
❌ NO — ISC is a CONSTITUTIONAL body (Art. 263). It was established by Presidential Order in 1990 after the Sarkaria Commission recommended it. Zonal Councils are statutory. PYQ 2025.
ISC is chaired by the Union Home Minister?
❌ NO — ISC is chaired by the PRIME MINISTER. Union Home Minister chairs Zonal Councils. Common swap. PYQ 2021.
National Security Council is a statutory body?
❌ NO — NSC was set up by an executive order of Cabinet Secretariat in 1998. It is NEITHER constitutional NOR statutory — it is purely an executive arrangement. PYQ 2025.
GST Council decisions are binding on both Centre and states?
❌ NO — SC held in Mohit Minerals (2022) that GST Council recommendations are NOT binding — only persuasive. Both Parliament and state legislatures can deviate. New PYQ relevance post-2022.
Supreme Court has jurisdiction to adjudicate inter-state river water disputes?
❌ NO — Art. 262 explicitly BARS the jurisdiction of Supreme Court (and all courts) from inter-state water disputes. Parliament has enacted ISRWD Act 1956 for separate tribunals. PYQ 2023.
Finance Commission is an executive body like NITI Aayog?
❌ NO — Finance Commission is a CONSTITUTIONAL body (Art. 280). NITI Aayog is an executive body (replaced Planning Commission). GST Council also became constitutional after 101st CAA 2016. PYQ 2024.
Art. 263 automatically creates the Inter-State Council?
❌ NO — Art. 263 only EMPOWERS the President to create ISC if he deems it necessary. The ISC was actually set up only in 1990 after Sarkaria Commission’s recommendation — not automatically on Constitution’s commencement. PYQ 2017.
Sikkim was incorporated into India through Art. 3 (state reorganisation)?
❌ NO — Sikkim was incorporated through Art. 2 (admission of a NEW state from outside India) via the 36th Constitutional Amendment 1975. Art. 3 deals with reorganisation of EXISTING states. PYQ context.
There are 5 Scheduled Area states under the Fifth Schedule?
❌ NO — Currently 10 states have Scheduled Areas under Fifth Schedule: AP, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, HP, Jharkhand, MP, Maharashtra, Odisha, Rajasthan, and Telangana. Not 5 or 8. PYQ context.

Memory Tricks & Mnemonics

Art. 3 — What Parliament Can Do
FIADA
Form a new state · Increase area · Alter boundaries · Diminish area · Alter name

Think: “FIADA — Five powers Parliament has over state territories”
5th Schedule — Key Numbers
10 · ¾ · 20
10 = States with Fifth Schedule areas
¾ = Minimum ST members in TAC (3/4th)
20 = Maximum TAC members

TAC: “Three-quarters tribal, twenty total”
6th Schedule States
AMTM
Assam · Meghalaya · Tripura · Mizoram

All 4 are Northeast states. Think: “AMTM — All My Tribal Mates” — all Northeast, all Sixth Schedule.
ISC vs Zonal Councils
C vs S
ISC = Constitutional (Art. 263) — chaired by PM, one body
Zonal = Statutory (States Reorganisation Act) — chaired by HM, five zones

C for Constitutional = C for Centre (PM). S for Statutory = S for Sectoral/Zonal.
Concurrent List — What moved in 42nd CAA
EFP → Concurrent
Education · Forests · Population control & family planning — moved from State List to Concurrent List in 1976 (42nd CAA)

Think “EFP — Emergency Federalism Punch” — Indira govt centralised these 3 in Emergency era.
When Parliament Can Legislate on State List
RANET
Rajya Sabha resolution (Art. 249) · Agreement of states (Art. 252) · National Emergency (Art. 250) · External affairs/treaties (Art. 253) · Treaty implementation

“RANET — Five nets that bring State List under Parliament’s reach”
Seven Schedule List Numbers
97 · 66 · 47
97 = Union List entries
66 = State List entries
47 = Concurrent List entries

Descending order: 97, 66, 47. Centre has the most entries — befitting the quasi-federal character.
Unitary Features of India
SSCGER
Single Constitution · Single citizenship · Centre alters state boundaries · Governor = Centre’s agent · Emergency powers centralise · Residuary with Centre

“SSCGER — Six reasons India is NOT a true federation”

Quick Comparison Reference

Ref
Fifth vs Sixth Schedule — Master Comparison
Most frequently tested comparison in Polity — PYQ 2015, 2019, 2021, 2023, 2025
Feature Fifth Schedule Sixth Schedule
Constitutional Provision Art. 244(1) Art. 244(2)
Applicable States 10 mainland states (AP, CG, GJ, HP, JH, MP, MH, OD, RJ, TG) 4 NE states only: Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram
Area Designation “Scheduled Areas” “Tribal Areas” (NOT Scheduled Areas)
Who Notifies Areas PRESIDENT by Order Parliament by law (Governor modifies by order)
Autonomous Bodies NO autonomous districts/councils YES — Autonomous District Councils & Regional Councils
Legislative Powers Governor can make Regulations (needs Presidential assent) District Councils can make laws (needs Governor’s assent)
Advisory Body Tribes Advisory Council (TAC) — advisory only No TAC — District Councils have real legislative power
Court System No separate courts under Fifth Schedule Village Courts/Courts of District Councils for tribal offences
Governor’s Annual Report YES — to President every year on Sch. Area administration NO — Governor’s role is to give assent to Council laws
Key Legislation PESA Act 1996 (statutory extension of PRIs) North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act; Bodoland etc.
Art.
Key Articles — Centre-State Relations Quick Reference
High-value article-to-provision mapping for Prelims 2026
ArticleSubjectKey PYQ Point
Art. 2Admission of new states from outside IndiaSikkim = Art. 2; simple majority
Art. 3Reorganisation of existing statesState opinion = not binding; simple majority
Art. 4Laws under Art.2/3 not CABsNOT Art. 368; can amend Sch. I, IV
Art. 244(1)Fifth Schedule — Scheduled Areas10 states; President notifies; TAC 3/4th STs
Art. 244(2)Sixth Schedule — Tribal Areas (NE)District Councils; Governor’s assent; 4 NE states
Art. 246Subject matter of laws — 3 ListsUnion (97), State (66), Concurrent (47)
Art. 248Residuary powersWith CENTRE — not states (unlike USA)
Art. 249RS can let Parliament legislate on State List2/3rd majority; 1 year; exclusive RS power
Art. 250Parliament on State List during National EmergencyCeases 6 months after Emergency
Art. 252Two+ states request Parliament to legislateApplies only to consenting states
Art. 253International treaties — Parliament on State ListParliament can override state subjects
Art. 254Repugnancy — Concurrent ListCentral law prevails; unless state gets Presidential assent
Art. 262Inter-state river water disputesSC jurisdiction EXCLUDED; ISRWD Act 1956
Art. 263Inter-State CouncilConstitutional; President by Order; PM chairs
Art. 280Finance CommissionConstitutional; every 5 years; President constitutes
Art. 279AGST CouncilConstitutional (101st CAA 2016); recommendatory only

Prepared exclusively for Legacy IAS · Bengaluru | UPSC Civil Services Prelims 2026 Revision Series

State Reorganisation · Fifth & Sixth Schedules · Federalism · Centre-State Relations | Part II | For Revision Purposes Only | © Legacy IAS 2026

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