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In India, there are autonomously administered territories for Scheduled Tribes, administered by representatives of those tribes.The Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India allows for the formation of Autonomous District Councils and Autonomous Regional Councils in Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, and Tripura, granting them autonomy within their respective territories.
The Ministry of Cooperation is a Union ministry under the Government of India [1] which was formed in 2021. The ministry provides a separate administrative, legal and policy framework for strengthening the cooperative movement in the country.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Autonomy_and_independence_(cooperatives)&oldid=265147857"
India is a federal republic with three spheres of government: union, state and local. The 73rd and 74th constitutional amendments give recognition and protection to local governments and in addition each state has its own local government legislation. [1] Since 1992, local government in India takes place in two very distinct forms.
In the initial stage co-operative movement in India stood up slowly. In 1904 British govt formed a co-operative rule on the basis of report given by Fredric Nicholson a British officer of Madras region. While the first co-operative society formed in Kaṇaginahāḷa of Gadaga district of Karnataka becoming the first co-operative of Asia. It ...
The Federal Public Service Commission became the Union Public Service Commission after independence. It was given a constitutional status under the Constitution of India on 26 January 1950. [9] [7] In 1947, the then deputy prime minister Vallabhbhai Patel called the recruits as the "steel frame of India".
It also administers various welfare schemes for central government pensioners, i.e., redressal for Pensioners' grievances through CPENGRAM, an online pension sanction module for civil pensioners "Bhavishya", Sankalp, etc., under the umbrella of Pensioners' Portal.
The governance of India is based on a tiered federal system, wherein the Constitution of India assigns the subjects on which each tier of government exercises powers. An intrinsic characteristic of Indian federalism is that it is designed to be asymmetric where necessary.