This page provides complete NCERT Class 11 India Constitution at Work Chapter 8 questions, including MCQs, one-word and descriptive questions. All questions are extracted line-by-line from NCERT for full syllabus coverage and exam preparation.
These stories illustrate that local government is about government closest to the common people, involving day-to-day life and problems of ordinary citizens. The advantages of local government include convenient access for citizens to solve problems quickly and at minimum cost, meaningful participation in decision-making, and purposeful accountability. Democracy requires that tasks which can be performed locally should be left in the hands of local people and their representatives, as common people are more familiar with and concerned about local government than with State or national governments.
The chapter traces the growth of local government in India from ancient village assemblies (sabhas) and panchayats, through the colonial period where elected local bodies were created after 1882 by Lord Ripon, to the Government of India Acts of 1919 and 1935 which established village panchayats in many provinces. Mahatma Gandhi strongly pleaded for decentralization of economic and political power, believing that strengthening village panchayats was a means of effective decentralization and that independence must begin at the bottom.
However, when the Constitution was prepared, local government was assigned to the States and mentioned only in the Directive Principles (non-justiciable). Several reasons explain this: the turmoil of Partition resulted in a strong unitary inclination; Nehru viewed extreme localism as a threat to national unity; and Dr. Ambedkar believed that the faction and caste-ridden nature of rural society would defeat the purpose of local government.
Nevertheless, after independence, the Community Development Programme (1952) and the three-tier Panchayati Raj system recommended for rural areas laid the groundwork. However, many States did not establish elected local bodies, and where they existed, they lacked adequate powers and were dependent on State and central governments for financial assistance.
The chapter provides detailed coverage of the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments (passed in 1992, came into force in 1993). The 73rd Amendment deals with rural local governments (Panchayati Raj Institutions) and established: a uniform three-tier structure (Gram Panchayat at village level, Mandal/Taluka Panchayat at intermediary level, and Zilla Panchayat at district level); mandatory creation of Gram Sabha comprising all adult voters; direct elections to all three levels with a five-year term (if dissolved, fresh elections within six months); reservation of one-third of all positions for women (including within SC/ST quotas, enabling Dalit or Adivasi women to become Sarpanch); reservation for SC/ST in proportion to their population; transfer of 29 subjects listed in the Eleventh Schedule (including agriculture, minor irrigation, rural housing, drinking water, roads, rural electrification, poverty alleviation, primary education, health and sanitation, women and child development, public distribution system, etc.); establishment of an autonomous State Election Commission to conduct local body elections; and a State Finance Commission every five years to review local government finances and revenue distribution. The 74th Amendment applies similar provisions to urban local bodies (Nagarpalikas):municipal corporations, town municipalities, and nagar panchayats:with functions listed in the Twelfth Schedule.
The chapter concludes by assessing the implementation and impact of these amendments. Today, India has over 600 Zilla Panchayats, about 6,000 block Panchayats, 2,40,000 Gram Panchayats, and over 100 city corporations, 1,400 town municipalities, and over 2,000 Nagar Panchayats.
More than 32 lakh members are elected every five years, including at least 13 lakh women, with over 200 women Adhyakshas in Zilla Panchayats and more than 80,000 women Sarpanchas. However, challenges remain: many States have not transferred most subjects to local bodies, limiting their effective functioning; local bodies raise only 0.24% of total revenues but account for 4% of total expenditure, making them dependent on State and central government grants; and local governments often continue as agencies implementing welfare schemes rather than as autonomous decision-making bodies.
The chapter emphasizes that true democracy means decentralization of power:legal provisions are important, but the true test of democracy lies in the practice of those provisions. Local governments have significantly altered the social profile of leadership at the village level, giving power to women, Scheduled Castes, and Scheduled Tribes who did not enjoy it earlier, leading to both empowerment and inevitable tensions as dominant groups resist losing control.
Local government is government at the: (Pg. 178)
Who took the initiative in creating elected local government bodies in 1882? (Pg. 179)
According to Mahatma Gandhi, independence must begin at the: (Pg. 180)
The 73rd Amendment deals with: (Pg. 182-183)
At the base of the three-tier Panchayati Raj structure is the: (Pg. 183)
What percentage of positions in all panchayat institutions are reserved for women? (Pg. 184)
The Eleventh Schedule of the Constitution lists subjects to be transferred to: (Pg. 184-185)
The State Election Commissioner is responsible for: (Pg. 186)
The 74th Amendment deals with: (Pg. 187)
As of the text, how many elected members are there in local bodies across India every five years? (Pg. 188)
Local bodies in India raise what percentage of total revenues collected but account for 4% of total expenditure? (Pg. 192)
The advantage of local government is that it is so ______ the people. (Pg. 178) Page 353
In modern times, elected local government bodies were created after ______. (Pg. 179) Page 354
Nehru looked upon extreme localism as a threat to ______ and integration of the nation. (Pg. 180) Page 355
The 73rd and 74th Amendments came into force in the year ______. (Pg. 183) Page 358
The Gram Sabha comprises all the adult members registered as voters in the ______ area. (Pg. 183) Page 358
Reservations for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are provided at all three levels in proportion to their ______. (Pg. 184) Page 359
The Eleventh Schedule contains ______ subjects to be transferred to Panchayati Raj institutions. (Pg. 184) Page 359
The State Finance Commission examines the financial position of local governments once every ______ years. (Pg. 186) Page 361
The Twelfth Schedule of the Constitution lists functions to be transferred to ______ local bodies. (Pg. 187) Page 362
More than ______ lakh members elected to local bodies every five years are women. (Pg. 188) Page 363
Many States have not transferred most of the subjects to local bodies, meaning they cannot really function in an ______ manner. (Pg. 191) Page 366
This post was last modified on May 5, 2026 9:23 pm