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Saturday, June 28, 2014

Administrative Structure of India : IAS Study Material

India is a democracy. Before its independence its future leaders chose the liberal democratic system as the administration system of India. On 26/01/1950, India declared itself as Republic. On this day the Constitution of India came into force. Today India is a federation of 28 states and 7 union territories and formally this federation is known as a Union.

Nominally the head of the country is the President in whom all executive powers are vested, but the real administrator of the country is the Prime Minister. After the national elections are held the President calls the most suitable candidate to form a government, known as the central government. Normally this candidate is the head of the largest party in the parliament. In case the government resigns because of any reason, the President can call the other candidate to form the government. The President can also declare, according to government advice, on new elections and if necessary an emergency state. The President has the right to be updated about crucial government matters and other rights like giving amnesty to prisoners etc. According to the Constitution, elections are to be held once in every five years, unless the parliament dissolves earlier or on the other hand, emergency is declared and in such a case parliament can continue another year.

The Indian Parliament consists of two houses. The Lower House called the Lok Sabha and the Upper House called the Rajya Sabha. In the national elections candidates are chosen for the Lower House. The candidates are elected in territorial constituencies. There are 543 territorial constituencies. Two members from the Anglo-Indian community are nominated to the Lower House by the President. The law, which obliges Government office to reserve 15% from the Scheduled Castes and 7% from the Scheduled Tribes, also exists in the Parliament. At least 22% of the Indian Parliament members belong to these two communities (see Caste system in modern India). In the past few years there is an attempt to oblige a law to allow about 33% women as Parliament members.

The Upper House, Rajya Sabha, consists of up to 250 members. Of these members 230 are elected by state legislatures and about 15 are nominated by the President. Unlike the Lower House, the Upper House cannot be dissolved, but one third of its members resign every two years.

Most of the parliamentary activities, passing laws, no-confidence votes, budget bills, take place in the Lower House. The Upper House together with the Lower House amends the Constitution. These two Houses together with the state legislatures also elect the President.

The states have their own legislatures. Some states have two Houses and some only one House. The Lower House where most of the legislature activities happen is called the Vidhan Sabha. The state elections are held every five years unless the state government is dissolved earlier. In these elections members for the Lower House are elected.

Head of a state is called Chief Minister, who is member of the Lower House. Constitutionally the figurehead of the state is the Governor, who is appointed by the President according to the advice of the national government. After the state elections the governor calls for the suitable candidate to form the government. In general the governor has more legislative rights at state level than the President has at national level. The governor can call on early elections in the state, or fire the government if he thinks that the government has failed or is unstable.




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In the federal relations between the state and central government, the central government has more authority on state matters than the state government. For example the central government has the right to redistribute the state borders without consulting the state governments on this matter. If the political conditions in any state are not stable, the national government can call on the President to declare President's rule in that specific state. And so the government in that state is dissolved, which means an emergency rule is declared and sometimes if necessary the army is put to work in that state.

Even though the Constitution determinates the rights of the different authorities in the administration process, there can be other pressures like strong lobbies or strong political parties, which, sometimes determinate the real administration process. Sometimes the authority implemented by the President is questioned by the government or by political parties as deviation from his constitutional rights as the nominal head of the Union.

SOURCE:
http://adaniel.tripod.com/administration.htm
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Chief Ministers of Indian States - Part 1 : IAS Study Material

Chief Ministers of Indian states

Roles and Responsibilities of the Chief Minister
According to the Indian Constitution, the elected head of the Council of Ministers in an Indian state is the Chief Minister. In reality, the Governor is guided by the Chief Minister in the various powers that the Governor exercises, although as the Constitution outlines, the Chief Minister is individually responsible to the Governor.
Power and Authority of Chief Minister
The powers and functions of the Chief Minister are, in most respects, similar to those of the Prime Minister at the Centre. The only difference lies in the jurisdiction over which they exercise their powers.
The Chief Minister who is also the leader of the ruling party chooses the members of his council and allots portfolio is to them, presides over all meetings, can ask an erring minister to resign; and is the prime spokesman of the government.
All major decisions in the state are taken by the Chief Minister with the support of the Council of Ministers. Since the Chief Minister is the real head of the state, the development of the state, in terms of financial, technological, and human development indices, rests solely on the powers of the Chief Minister, who must be financially aided by the Centre, in terms of resources and materials.
·         The CM has a pivotal role in the financial matters of a state, including the budget, basic infrastructural and developmental priorities of the state, planning growth of the state and others.
·         Being the senior most member of the Cabinet which is the executive branch of the state government, the Chief Minister is invested with the power to dismiss any Cabinet member or Council of Ministers, based on the performance of the Minister within the administrative capacities of the state.
·         It is the Chief Minister who heads the Council of Ministers in the State. Upon his recommendations the other Ministers are appointed or removed by the Governor.
·         Of course, the Chief Minister cannot ignore some important members in the party. He has to look to other considerations like the representation of minorities, the younger age group and the representation of Scheduled Castes in his Cabinet.
·         Sometimes in the appointment of Ministers, the regional consideration is also given due consideration. The Ministers should be selected from all regions of the State. In fact the Chief Minister is the central to its (Council of Ministers) formation, central to its life and central to its death.
·         When he resigns or dies the Council of Ministers also automatically goes out of power. He distributes portfolios among the members of the Council of Ministers. He presides over the meetings of the Cabinet. As the Chairman of the Cabinet Committee, he decides what matters should be put up before the Cabinet for discussion.
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·         He is the connecting link between his Council of Ministers and the Governor. He is to communicate to the Governor the decisions of the Ministers and any other information, regarding the State administration which the Governor may call for. If the Governor so requires, the Chief Minister may place before the Cabinet any matter where a decision has been taken by a Minister without consulting his colleagues in the Cabinet.
·         The Chief Minister is the Chief spokesman of the State Government. His utterances and assurances are deemed to be authoritative and binding on the State Government. He also acts as the co-ordinator of Governmental policy and resolves any departmental conflict.
·         In this capacity, he is authorised to supervise the orders of any Minister and may repudiate any such order, if necessary. In certain appointments like the Advocate-General and the members of the State Public Service Commission, he exercises considerable influence.
·         The Chief Minister also functions as the leader of the majority party in the State Legislature. In this capacity he has also great influence over the business in the State Legislature.
·         As the leader of the majority party he is in a position to get any legislation passed which is within the competence of the State Legislature. He is authorised to advise the Governor to dissolve the Legislative Assembly. The Governor being a constitutional ruler generally acts upon the advice of the Chief Minister.
·         Thus the position of the Chief Minister in the State administration is very significant in relation to his Cabinet colleagues; He is more than a primus inter pares (First among equals).
·         The appointment and removal of the Cabinet colleagues are actually made by him. In distributing portfolios his voice is decisive. His resignation or death entails the resignation or death of the Council of Ministers.
·         In relation to the State Legislature the Chief Minister has considerable influence over the laws that are to be passed by the Legislature. He may recommend the Governor to dissolve State, Legislature and order for a fresh election, if it goes against him.
·         From all these constitutional provisions the Chief Minister may appear quite powerful in State administration.
But in actual practice the position of the Chief Minister of a State depends upon the following factors:

·         Firstly, the position of the Chief Minister depends primarily upon his personality. If he is a person of integrity and has a dominating personality then he can command great influence over State administration. It is rightly maintained that the office is what “the holder chooses to make it.”
·         Secondly, the position of the Chief Minister is partly determined by his relationship with the Party in power in the Centre. If a Chief Minister has much influence in the Centre he can make the position of the State more influential in New Delhi, thereby enhancing his authority and power in the State. As democracy is meant Government by parties, the Chief Minister of a State should have to please his central party organization. If the central organization of the party does not encourage him, his position in the State would be precarious.


·         Thirdly, the position of the Chief Minister considerably depends upon the support of the members of his party. If there are a number of dissidents in the party, they make his position “a bed of thorns.” As long as he enjoys the confidence of the State Legislature he is powerful. Once that confidence is withdrawn, no longer he continues to be the Chief Minister.

SOURCE:


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Sunday, June 22, 2014

IAS Geograpy Oceanography: Zoning of the Ocean Part 2

ZONING OF THE OCEANS

2. Bathymetric

The term bathymetry is defined as the depth of water relative to sea level. Thus bathymetric measurements can determine the topography of the ocean floor, and have shown that the sea floor is varied, complex, and ever-changing, containing plains, canyons, active and extinct volcanoes, mountain ranges, and hot springs. Some features, such as mid-ocean ridges (where oceanic crust is constantly produced) and subduction zones, also called deep-sea trenches (where it is constantly destroyed), are unique to the ocean floor. The term “bathymetry” originally referred to the ocean’s depth relative to sea level, although it has come to mean “submarine topography,” or the depths and shapes of underwater terrain.
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In the same way that topographic maps represent the three-dimensional features (or relief) of overland terrain, bathymetric maps illustrate the land that lies underwater. Variations in sea-floor relief may be depicted by color and contour lines called depth contours or isobaths.

Bathymetry is the foundation of the science of hydrography, which measures the physical features of a water body.  Hydrography includes not only bathymetry, but also the shape and features of the shoreline; the characteristics of tides, currents, and waves; and the physical and chemical properties of the water itself.

Bathymetric mapping involves the production of ocean and sea maps based upon bathymetric data (see historic map). Bathymetric maps represent the ocean depth as a function of geographical coordinates in the same way topographic maps represent the altitude of Earth's surface at different geographic points. The most popular type of bathymetric maps are ones on which lines of equal depths (called isobaths) are represented.



Bathymetric techniques For hundreds of years, the only way to measure ocean depth was the sounding line, a weighted rope or wire that was lowered overboard until it touched the ocean floor. Not only was this method time-consuming, it was inaccurate; ship drift or water currents could drag the line off at an angle, which would exaggerate the depth reading. It was also difficult to tell when the sounding line had actually touched bottom.

England's Sir John Murray compiled this bathymetric (depth) chart of the North Atlantic in 1911. Murray's chart went far beyond American naval officer Matthew Maury's first attempt at bathymetric mapping in 1855. In addition, Murray's map gave birth to the idea of the Telegraphic Plateau, a submarine land formation from Canada to the British Isles, across which the first transatlantic cable was laid.

In the twentieth century, sounding lines were entirely replaced by sonar systems. Sonar ( sound navigation ranging), invented during World War II (1939–1945) measures distances by emitting a short pulse of high-frequency sound and measuring the time until an echo is heard. After the war, ships with sonar units attached to their hulls crisscrossed the world's oceans systematically, measuring depth. The data collected made possible complete bathymetric maps of the world's oceans. For the first time, scientists knew what 70 percent of Earth's surface really looked like (radar, which produces images by bouncing radio waves rather than sound waves off distant objects, cannot be used for bathymetry because water absorbs radio waves).
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Many sonar techniques have been developed for bathymetry. When high-resolution images are desired, an underwater unit may be towed behind a ship, scanning to the left and right with multiple sonar beams (sidescan sonar). Furthermore, orbiting visible-light cameras image the bottoms of some shallow waters, while satellite radar maps deep-sea topography by detecting the subtle variations in sea level caused by the gravitational pull of undersea mountains, ridges, and other masses.

Bathymetric chart

A bathymetric chart is the submerged equivalent of an above-water topographic map. Bathymetric charts are designed to present accurate, measurable description and visual presentation of the submerged terrain.




In an ideal case, the joining of a bathymetric chart and topographic map of the same scale and projection of the same geographic area would be seamless. The only difference would be that the values begin increasing after crossing the zero at the designated sea level datum. Thus the topographic map's mountains have the greatest values while the bathymetric chart's greatest depths have the greatest values. Simply put, the bathymetric chart is intended to show the land if overlying waters were removed in exactly the same manner as the topographic map.


Excerpts from:
http://biophysics.sbg.ac.at/rovigno/rovigno3.htm
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Thursday, June 19, 2014

IAS Geograpy Oceanography: Zoning of the Ocean Part 1

ZONING OF THE OCEANS

1. Penetration of sunrays

Sunlight entering the water may travel about 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) into the ocean under the right conditions, but there is rarely any significant light beyond 200 meters (656 feet).

The ocean is divided into three zones based on depth and light level. The upper 200 meters (656 feet) of the ocean is called the euphotic, or "sunlight," zone. This zone contains the vast majority of commercial fisheries and is home to many protected marine mammals and sea turtles. The epipelagic (euphotic) zone, also called the sunlit zone, receives enough sunlight to support photosynthesis. The temperatures in this zone range anywhere from 40 to −3 °C (104 to 27 °F). The epipelagic zone is the one closest to the surface and is the best lit. It extends to 200 metres and contains both phytoplankton and zooplankton that can support larger organisms like marine mammals and some types of fish. Past 200 metres, not enough light penetrates the water to support life, and no plant life exists.

Only a small amount of light penetrates beyond this depth.

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The zone between 200 meters (656 feet) and 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) is usually referred to as the “twilight” zone, but is officially the dysphotic zone. In this zone, the intensity of light rapidly dissipates as depth increases. Such a miniscule amount of light penetrates beyond a depth of 200 meters that photosynthesis is no longer possible. The mesopelagic (disphotic) zone, where only small amounts of light penetrate, lies below the epipelagic zone. This zone is often referred to at the Twilight Zone due to its scarce amount of light. Temperatures in the mesopelagic zone range from 5 to 4 °C (41 to 39 °F). The pressure is higher here, it can be up to 1,470 pounds per square inch (10,100,000 Pa) and increases with depth.

The aphotic, or “midnight,” zone exists in depths below 1,000 meters (3,280 feet). Sunlight does not penetrate to these depths and the zone is bathed in darkness. 90% of the ocean lies in the bathypelagic (aphotic) zone into which no light penetrates. This is also called the midnight zone. Water pressure is very intense and the temperatures are near freezing range 0 to 6 °C (32 to 43 °F). Due to the total darkness in the zones past the epipelagic zone, many organisms that survive in the deep oceans do not have eyes, and other organisms make their own light with bioluminescence. Often the light is blue green in colour, because many marine organisms are sensitive to blue light. Two chemicals, luciferin and luciferase that react with one another to create a soft glow. The process by which bioluminescence is created is very similar to what happens when a glow stick is broken. Deep-sea organisms use bioluminescence for everything from luring prey to navigation .

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Animals such as fishes, whales, and sharks are found in the oceanic zone. There are creatures however, which thrive around hydrothermal vents, or geysers located on the ocean floor that expel super heated water that is rich in minerals. These organisms feed off of chemosynthetic bacteria, which use the super heated water and chemicals from the hydrothermal vents to create energy in place of photosynthesis. The existence of these bacteria allow creatures like squids, hatchet fish, octopuses, tube worms, giant clams, spider crabs and other organisms to survive

‘Photic’ is a derivative of ‘photon,’ the word for a particle of light.
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Saturday, June 14, 2014

India Councils Act 1861: Changes

Changes brought about by the India Councils Act 1861


1  -      Restored the powers of Govts. (eg: power of legislation to governor-in-councils) of Madras and Bombay.
2  -      Viceroy’s council was expanded by one more member expert in law.
3  -      Executive functions: Council of the Governor General expanded and a fifth member was added.

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4  -      Legislative functions: Not <6 and not >12 members were to be nominated by the Governor General and they were to hold the office for 2 years
5  -      Any bill relating to the public revenue or debt, religion, military, naval or foreign relations cannot be passed without the assent of the Governor General.
6  -      Formation of legislative councils in provinces other Madras and Bengal.
7  -      Portfolio System started. (What was Portfolio system – Portfolio referred to business of govt dept. Therefore, each portfolio became the responsibility of a single council member)

8  -      No difference between central and provincial subjects.
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