Union Territories
Duration: 2 min
This video lesson is available to enrolled students.
AI Summary
An AI-generated summary of this video lecture.
This educational video, presented by Pramod Rana Sir under the KnowledgeGate banner, covers the 'Constitutional System of India' with a specific focus on 'Union Territories' (केंद्रशासित प्रदेश). The instructor begins by manually writing notes on a digital whiteboard, discussing the numerical count of these territories. He then transitions to a pre-made flowchart to explain the classification of Union Territories, specifically distinguishing those that possess their own legislative assemblies from those that do not. The top right corner displays a green box with the topic title.
Chapters
0:00 – 2:00 00:00-02:00
The instructor stands before a screen displaying the title 'केंद्रशासित प्रदेश' in large red Hindi text. He actively writes on the upper left corner, listing numbers '5', '6', '7', and '8' alongside the abbreviation 'UT'. He writes 'राज्य' (State) next to the number 6, suggesting a comparison. He circles the number '8' and writes constitutional article ranges like '152-151' and '152-237', likely referencing legal amendments or specific articles governing these territories. He also writes '24 UT' indicating a total count.
2:00 – 2:15 02:00-02:15
The screen displays a detailed flowchart titled 'केंद्रशासित प्रदेश'. The instructor points to a specific branch labeled 'विधानसभा वाले केंद्रशासित प्रदेश' (Union Territories with Legislative Assemblies). This section lists three entities: '1) जम्मू और कश्मीर (90)', '2) दिल्ली (70)', and '3) पुडुचेरी (30)'. He uses his hand to indicate these specific items, emphasizing the seat counts in parentheses as crucial data for students. Another branch labeled 'शासन' (Governance) is visible on the left.
The lesson effectively moves from a general numerical overview to a structured classification of Union Territories. By combining handwritten notes on the board with a clear digital flowchart, the instructor highlights the unique status of territories like Delhi and Jammu & Kashmir that have legislative assemblies, providing specific seat counts (90, 70, 30) as key revision points for the constitutional system of India.