Q. The tenure of every Panchayat in India is five years from:
A. the scheduled date of its first meeting.
B. the date of notification of election
C. the date of declaration of election results
D. the date of oath of office by members
In India, the Panchayati Raj generally refers to the system introduced by constitutional amendment in 1992, although it is based upon the traditional panchayat system of South Asia. The modern Panchayati Raj and its Gram Panchayats are not to be confused with the extra-constitutional Khap Panchayats (or Caste Panchayats) found in northern India. The Panchayati Raj system was formalized in 1992, following a study conducted by a number of Indian committees on various ways of implementing more decentralized administration.
A. the scheduled date of its first meeting.
B. the date of notification of election
C. the date of declaration of election results
D. the date of oath of office by members
Answer: the scheduled date of its first meeting.
In India, the Panchayati Raj generally refers to the system introduced by constitutional amendment in 1992, although it is based upon the traditional panchayat system of South Asia. The modern Panchayati Raj and its Gram Panchayats are not to be confused with the extra-constitutional Khap Panchayats (or Caste Panchayats) found in northern India. The Panchayati Raj system was formalized in 1992, following a study conducted by a number of Indian committees on various ways of implementing more decentralized administration.
The tenure of every panchayat in India is five years from the schedule date of its first meeting
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