The State, the Government,
and You
The greatest punishment for being unwilling to rule is being ruled by someone worse than oneself. — Socrates, Greek philosopher (in ‘The Republic’ by Plato, c. 380 BCE)
📚 The Big Questions
- What is the difference between a state and a government?
- What is the difference between a democracy and a republic? What makes India a democratic republic?
- How do citizens engage with the government in day-to-day life? How can one make government work for the people?
What is a State?
A state (or a nation) is a political organisation that has the authority to govern a defined territory and its population.
| Component | Meaning |
|---|---|
| People | The citizens who permanently live in the country and identify with its territory and culture. |
| Land (Territory) | A fixed geographical area with clear, agreed-upon boundaries separating it from neighbouring states. |
| Government | A system to run the country — makes laws, enforces them, and resolves disputes on behalf of the state. |
| Sovereignty | The full power to make laws and take decisions without any outside control. No other state can interfere in internal affairs. |
In India, the word ‘state’ can refer to (a) the Indian State as a whole, or (b) subnational units like Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, or Kerala. Except in such specific cases, ‘state’ (lowercase) refers to the larger concept of a political organisation.
The state has four essential features — a defined territory, a permanent population, a government, and sovereignty.
Why permanent population matters: Without people who identify with and live in a territory, there is no state. Tourists or transient visitors do not form a population. A permanent population develops its own culture and society rooted in a geographically defined territory.
Why sovereignty is essential: Sovereignty means the state has complete control over its own matters. It makes and implements laws according to its own needs — no external body can interfere. This is the defining feature that distinguishes a state from a mere administrative unit.
The government is just one part of the state. The state is like a school — it remains even as teachers (governments) come and go. We interact with the government daily, not the entire state, which is why people often use the two words interchangeably.
What is a Government?
The government is a group of people or a system that runs the country. It includes leaders, ministers, and officials who:
- Make laws
- Enforce laws
- Resolve disputes
The government is just one part of the state. It can change after elections, but the state remains the same.
| Concept | State | Government |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Permanent, larger concept | Can change after elections |
| Includes | People, territory, government, sovereignty | Leaders, ministers, officials, bureaucrats |
| Analogy | The School | The Principal and Teachers |
| Interchangeable? | Often used interchangeably in daily speech because the government acts on behalf of the state and is its visible face. | |
People, Police, and the Government
The police in India are part of the state government and are responsible for maintaining law and order within each state. They are agents of the state who can legally use force to ensure people live in a safe and secure environment, free from crime and violence.
| Role of Police | Details |
|---|---|
| Law Enforcement | Maintain law and order; prevent and detect crime. |
| Judicial Support | Investigate and present cases to the judiciary. |
| Social Change | Awareness programs on road safety, drug abuse, women’s safety. |
| Constitutional Duty | Must respect and protect rights guaranteed under the Constitution. |
| Accountability | Citizens can question police actions through courts, RTI, etc. |
🔑 Key Interactions (Fig. 6.6)
- People elect leaders to represent them (Legislature)
- Legislature makes laws; Executive enforces them; Judiciary interprets them
- Police enforce law, maintain peace, protect citizens and report to judiciary
- Constitution, laws, and courts protect people’s rights and ensure justice
Democracy and Republic
The Constitution’s Preamble uses both ‘democratic’ and ‘republic’ — two distinct but related concepts. Though often used interchangeably, they have different meanings.
| Concept | Core Idea | Key Feature | Etymology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Democracy | Rule by the people | People choose government through free and fair elections | Greek: demos (people) + kratos (rule) |
| Republic | Elected head of state | Head of state is elected (directly or indirectly), not hereditary. Powers limited by constitution/law. | Latin: res publica (public affair) |
Not all democracies are republics. The UK, Canada, and Sweden are democracies but NOT republics — they each have a monarch as head of state.
India and USA are both democracies AND republics — their heads of state are elected, not hereditary.
India’s President is elected — not directly by the people, but by a group of elected representatives (details in Grade 8).
In 1782, as the American War of Independence against Britain was ending, one of Washington’s officers suggested he become King of America. Washington firmly refused, stating that such a plan would harm the country, and that he believed only in a government by the people under a constitution — demonstrating deep commitment to a republican form of government many years before he became the first President of the United States in 1789.
India — A Republic that Protects the Rights of All
India is a democratic republic. Its Constitution guarantees fundamental rights to all citizens. Constitutional provisions ensure that rule by a representative majority does not violate the fundamental rights of any citizen.
The Constitution ensures no part of the government becomes too powerful. Elected leaders cannot pass laws that go against fundamental rights — like freedom of speech, religion, or equality before the law.
According to Kautilya (author of Arthashastra), the king — the primary authority of the state — must follow Raja Dharma and ensure good governance. Without government, society becomes chaotic, with the powerful (big fish) eating the weak (small fish). This concept is called Matsya Nyaya (law of the fish).
In India, the state operates through institutions such as the legislature, executive, and judiciary. The state claims the legitimate use of power, for example, through control by the police and taxation.
A Resident Welfare Association (RWA) banned deliveries after 9 pm based on a majority vote, ignoring the minority who argued it would affect the sick and elderly. When an elderly resident collapsed due to delayed medicine, the RWA revised the rule — showing how minority rights must be protected even in democratic systems. This is a republic in action: the rule of law is more powerful than the wishes of the majority.
Certain geographical areas belong to tribal communities — protected by law. Private companies and individuals cannot buy or lease such land without community permission and due legal process. Example: Mining was not allowed in the sacred hills of the Dongria Kondh tribe in Odisha, as the community strongly opposed it. The rights of tribals were protected by law.
Legislature: The Lawmaking Body
The legislature is the branch of government that makes laws. In a democracy, it represents the people and creates rules that apply to everyone. It ensures governance happens through well-defined laws rather than personal wishes or arbitrary decisions.
| Level | Legislature | Jurisdiction |
|---|---|---|
| National | Parliament (Lok Sabha + Rajya Sabha) | Laws for the whole country |
| State | State Legislature (Vidhan Sabha / Vidhan Parishad) | Laws only for that state |
Legislative
Parliament & State Legislatures make laws (e.g., Right to Education Act), approve budgets. All schools must have separate toilets for boys and girls — this is a legislative mandate.
Executive
Political Executive (ministers) guides policy; Permanent Executive (bureaucrats like District Education Officers) ensures laws are followed — e.g., implementing Samagra Shiksha, PM Poshan Yojana.
Judiciary
Courts, NCPCR*, SCPCR** protect rights of children; take action if rights are denied. Guardian of law. (*National / **State Council for Protection of Child Rights)
Executive: The Law-Implementing and Policymaking Body
The executive organ is primarily responsible for implementing laws formulated by the legislature and taking policy decisions. It has two parts:
Political Executive
Consists of leaders elected by the people:
- Prime Minister, Chief Ministers, and their Ministers
- President and Governors (mostly formal/symbolic roles)
They make big decisions, introduce new laws, set national goals, represent India internationally. They stay in power for a fixed term — usually 5 years — unless re-elected or dismissed. Their power depends on public trust.
Permanent Executive (Bureaucracy)
Consists of officers not elected but selected through competitive exams like UPSC. Also called bureaucrats or civil servants.
Unlike politicians, they are NOT removed after elections. They keep the government running smoothly regardless of which party is in power.
| Service | Full Name | Focus Area |
|---|---|---|
| IAS | Indian Administrative Service | General Administration |
| IPS | Indian Police Service | Police & Law Enforcement |
| IFS | Indian Foreign Service | Diplomacy & Foreign Affairs |
| IRS | Indian Revenue Service | Taxation & Revenue |
| IFoS | Indian Forest Service | Forest Management |
🔑 Key Functions of Bureaucracy
- Implementing laws, policies, and schemes across the country
- Creating a link between citizens and the government
- Delivering public services (schools, roads, hospitals)
- Addressing public grievances
- Record-keeping and governance
- Managing large-scale programs: census, national elections, disaster relief, MGNREGS, COVID-19 vaccination drive
The bureaucracy is a hierarchical structure. Similar structures exist at district and block levels too. Our everyday interactions are typically with grassroots bureaucrats — government school teachers, anganwadi workers, health workers, water/sanitation workers, or bus conductors.
The Government and You
The Government of India plays a triple role:
| Role | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Protector | Law and defence | Police forces, armed forces, maintaining law & order |
| Provider | Public welfare and infrastructure | Free school education, roads, bridges, railways, airports, food safety |
| Regulator | Economic activity and social justice | Regulating markets, welfare schemes, consumer protection |
How Citizens Can Engage with Government
Grievance Redressal: File complaints at government grievance offices, approach vigilance commissions for corruption cases. Use the Public Grievances Portal (https://pgportal.gov.in/). The concerned department must respond within a specified time. Several states also have such portals.
Right to Information (RTI): A powerful Act through which citizens can ask for information about government actions in the public interest — e.g., money spent on roads, list of scholarship beneficiaries, status of metro projects. Officials are bound to provide the information, bringing transparency and accountability.
Use the Media: Write in print/electronic media on government-related issues. Use social media (YouTube, X/Twitter, Facebook, Instagram) to share concerns and tag officials. E.g., Indian Railways’ @RailwaySeva on X.
Engage through Civil Society (NGOs): India has thousands of citizen groups working on education, health, environment, livelihoods, women’s empowerment. Join or create one to push the government on issues you care about.
Write to Political Representatives: Write letters to local representatives, ministers, or parliamentarians seeking action on specific issues.
Vote in Elections: Participate in local, state, and national elections to ensure leaders who care about the right issues are elected.
In Bagepalli (a town near Bengaluru), government officials undertook road doubling and streetlight work in an unprofessional manner, causing traffic issues and accidents. A citizen filed an RTI to obtain financial information. Armed with this, citizens confronted officials who then ensured proper completion of the work. This shows how RTI empowers citizens.
In 1970, the Kerala Government planned a massive hydroelectric project in Silent Valley that would have submerged vast tracts of untouched evergreen forests and destroyed immense biodiversity. Many NGOs mobilised public opinion against it, joined by hundreds of scientists, environmentalists, writers, public figures, teachers, and local villagers. In 1983, the Central Government intervened and cancelled the project. Two years later, Silent Valley was declared a National Park, ensuring lasting protection. A landmark example of successful civil society action.
Judiciary: The ‘Watchdog’
The judiciary is the part of the government that makes sure everyone follows the law. It settles disputes, protects people’s rights, and checks whether the laws made by the government are fair and just. In India, the judiciary is independent — not controlled by the government or politicians.
| Function | Details |
|---|---|
| Protects and defends laws | Ensures laws are followed properly. |
| Interprets laws | Explains what a law means when wording is complex or when people disagree. |
| Protects rights and liberty | Protects fundamental rights given by the Constitution; citizens can approach court if rights are violated. |
| Judicial Review | Acts as a referee when the government or others break the law; can strike down unconstitutional laws. |
🔑 Why Judiciary Matters
- Protects the rule of law — everyone must follow the law, even the government
- Keeps a check on unfair actions
- Ensures laws don’t harm people’s rights
- Resolves conflicts peacefully
- Without a strong and fair judiciary, democracy cannot survive
- Specifically: Courts, NCPCR, SCPCR protect children’s rights under education laws
Tiers of Government & Decentralisation
India has over 1.4 billion people, 28 states, 8 union territories, thousands of towns and villages, and many languages and cultures. A single central government cannot meet all needs. Hence, governance must be decentralised.
🏛️ Central (Union) Government — National Level
Defence, foreign affairs, currency, and concurrent subjects like education and marriage.
🏢 State Governments — State Level
Police, land, health, agriculture, and education in the state.
🏘️ Local Governments — Village/Town Level
Land, agriculture, water, drainage, streetlamps, parks, etc. — panchayats and municipalities.
Originally, the Constitution provided for only two levels of government — Union and State. Local governments (panchayats and municipalities) were under the State List. In the early 1990s, the Constitution was amended to create the Panchayati Raj system and the system of municipalities, making local governments the ‘third tier’ of India’s democracy. This was done to strengthen democracy at the grassroots and enable direct participation in decision-making.
Directive Principle: “The state shall take steps to organise village panchayats and endow them with such powers and authority as may be necessary to enable them to function as units of self-government.”
What is Decentralisation?
Decentralisation means that power and decision-making are spread out and not concentrated in just one place or group. Local problems should be solved locally; bigger issues by higher-level governments.
More Democratic
People get a chance to be more involved in decisions that affect their daily lives.
Better Knowledge
Local leaders know the area, its needs, and the traditions of the people better than distant officials.
Local Discussions
Local issues (like water supply, roads, or schools) can be discussed and solved by people who face them every day.
Stronger Local Governments
With power and responsibility, panchayats and municipalities can become lively places where people participate actively and leaders work responsibly.
More Accountability
When leaders are closer to the people, it is easier to question them, ask for answers, and make sure they do their job.
Mahatma Gandhi was a strong advocate of decentralisation. He believed in Gram Swaraj — largely self-sufficient village governments. He stated: “My idea of village swaraj is that it is a complete republic, independent of its neighbours for its own vital wants, and yet interdependent for many others in which dependence is a necessity.”
C.B. Muthamma — Trailblazer in Public Service
Chonira Belliappa Muthamma (1924–2009)
Born in Karnataka, C.B. Muthamma became the first woman to clear the examination for public services in 1948 and the first woman to join the Indian Foreign Service in 1949, despite strong gender bias. Women, for instance, “were made to sign an undertaking that they would resign if they got married,” as she later wrote.
She conducted a distinguished diplomatic career, eventually serving as India’s first woman ambassador in several countries.
When unjustly denied promotion, Muthamma approached the Supreme Court. A bench led by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer struck down gender-biased provisions as violating the Constitution and made strong comments on the Ministry of External Affairs’ record of discrimination against women.
Muthamma’s struggle remains a defining milestone in the pursuit of gender equality in Indian public service.
She also wrote on public issues — from the decolonisation of the Indian mind to Indian democracy. In one essay, she pointed to the “unbounded freedom of thought and belief” characteristic of Indian religions as being “the single most important factor that makes democracy possible in this country.”
Key Glossary & Chapter Summary
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| State | A political organisation with defined territory, permanent population, government, and sovereignty. |
| Sovereignty | Full power to make laws and take decisions without any outside control. |
| Government | The system that runs the country — makes, enforces, and resolves disputes over laws. |
| Democracy | Rule by the people; people choose government through free and fair elections. |
| Republic | Head of state is elected (not hereditary); rulers’ powers are limited by constitution/law. |
| Legislature | Lawmaking body; represents people; creates rules applying to all. |
| Executive | Implements laws and policies — divided into political executive (elected) and permanent executive (bureaucracy). |
| Judiciary | Interprets law, protects rights, ensures everyone — including government — follows the law. |
| Bureaucracy | Non-elected civil servants who implement government laws and policies. |
| Decentralisation | Spreading power across multiple levels so local problems are solved locally. |
| RTI | Right to Information Act — allows citizens to seek information on government actions. |
| Transparency | Open access to information about government policies, actions, and expenditure. |
| Accountability | Those in power must answer for their actions to the public and stakeholders. |
| Gram Swaraj | Gandhi’s concept of self-sufficient village republics as the ideal unit of democracy. |
| Matsya Nyaya | Kautilya’s concept — without law/government, the powerful devour the weak (big fish eat small fish). |
| Political Executive | Elected officials — PM, CM, ministers, President, Governors. |
| Permanent Executive | Non-elected bureaucrats selected through UPSC and similar exams; not removed with elections. |
| Raja Dharma | The king’s duty — to rule justly and protect the welfare of the state and its people. |
| Civil Society | Citizens’ groups/NGOs that work on public issues — health, education, environment, etc. |
📌 Before We Move On — Chapter Summary
- The state and the government are different, but often used interchangeably. The state includes citizens, territory, and sovereignty — it is permanent. The government is its operating system.
- A republic is a form of government where the head of state is elected, not hereditary, and powers are limited by a constitution or laws.
- The three pillars of government are the legislature, the executive, and the judiciary.
- In India, there are three tiers of government — union (central), state, and panchayat/municipalities.
- The Constitution forms the fundamental framework, ensuring checks and balances among three organs and three tiers.
- The media keeps citizens informed and provides platforms for discussion and debate.
- Civil society organisations (NGOs) play a critical role in raising issues and working with government to solve them.
- The permanent executive (bureaucracy) implements laws and policies devised by the government.
- Citizens can engage with government through RTI, grievance portals, media, NGOs, writing to representatives, and voting.
Practice MCQs
UPSC & State PCS Standard — Chapter 6: The State, the Government, and You
1. Police in India are part of the state government.
2. Police can legally use force to maintain law and order.
3. Police are not required to respect fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
Which of the above statements is/are CORRECT?


