Chapter 5 Union and its Territory

Chapter 5 Union and its Territory

In M. Laxmikanth’s 

Indian Polity (8th Edition, 2025), Chapter 5: Union and its Territory explains the geographical scope of India and the Parliament’s power to reorganize states.

I. Articles 1 to 4 (Part I of the Constitution)

  • Article 1: Describes India, that is Bharat, as a ‘Union of States’ rather than a ‘Federation of States’.
    • Keyword“Union of States”—Indicates that the Indian federation is not the result of an agreement by the states, and no state has the right to secede.
    • Territory of India is wider than the Union of India. The “Territory” includes States, Union Territories, and territories that may be acquired by the Government of India at any time.
  • Article 2: Empowers Parliament to admit into the Union of India, or establish, new states (refers to territories not currently part of India).
  • Article 3: Authorizes Parliament to reorganize the internal boundaries of existing states. It can:
    • Form a new state by separation or union of territories.
    • Increase or diminish the area of any state.
    • Alter the boundaries or the name of any state.
  • Article 4: Declares that laws made under Articles 2 and 3 are not to be considered as amendments of the Constitution under Article 368. This means they can be passed by a simple majority.

II. Procedure for Reorganizing States (Article 3)

  • Prior Recommendation: A bill for this purpose can be introduced in Parliament only with the prior recommendation of the President.
  • State View: The President must refer the bill to the State Legislature concerned for expressing its views within a specified period.
  • Not Binding: The Parliament is not bound by the views of the state legislature and can accept or reject them.

III. Evolution of States and Union Territories

  • Integration of Princely States: At independence, 552 princely states were within India. 549 joined immediately; Hyderabad (Police Action), Junagarh (Referendum), and Kashmir (Instrument of Accession) joined later.
  • Dhar Commission (1948) & JVP Committee (1948): Both rejected language as the basis for reorganization, favoring administrative convenience.
  • Fazl Ali Commission (1953): Accepted language as a basis but rejected the theory of ‘one language–one state’.
  • States Reorganisation Act (1956): Abolished the four-fold classification of states and created 14 states and 6 union territories.

IV. Important New States Formed (Chronology)

  • Andhra Pradesh (1953): The first linguistic state (created after the death of Potti Sriramulu).
  • Maharashtra and Gujarat (1960): Formed by bifurcating Bombay State.
  • Nagaland (1963): Carved out of Assam.
  • Haryana, Chandigarh, Himachal (1966): On the recommendation of the Shah Commission.
  • Sikkim (1974-75): Initially an ‘Associate State’ (35th Amendment) and later a full-fledged state (36th Amendment).
  • Latest Changes (2014-2019):
    • Telangana (2014): Carved out of Andhra Pradesh.
    • Jammu & Kashmir (2019): The state was bifurcated into the UT of Jammu & Kashmir and the UT of Ladakh via the J&K Reorganisation Act.
    • Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu (2020): Merged into a single Union Territory.

V. Ceding Territory to Foreign States

  • Berubari Union Case (1960): The Supreme Court held that the power of Parliament to diminish the area of a state (Article 3) does not cover ceding Indian territory to a foreign country. Ceding requires a Constitutional Amendment under Article 368.
  • 100th Amendment Act (2015): Enacted to give effect to the acquiring of certain territories by India and transfer of certain other territories to Bangladesh (Land Boundary Agreement).year wise list of the state formation with amendment in the constitution
  • year wise list of the state formation with amendment in the constitution











    Below is a chronological list of major changes to the Indian states and Union Territories (UTs), including the constitutional amendments that facilitated these changes.


    I. Major Structural Change (1956)
    1956 (7th Amendment Act): Abolished the four-fold classification of states (Part A, B, C, and D) and reorganized India into 14 States and 6 Union Territories based on the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. 

    II. State Formation & Chronological List (Post-1956)

    Year 
    State / UT Change
    Constitutional Amendment
    Details
    1960
    Gujarat

    Bifurcated from Bombay State; became the 15th state.
    1961
    Dadra & Nagar Haveli
    10th Amendment
    Converted from a liberated territory to a Union Territory.
    1962
    Goa, Daman & Diu
    12th Amendment
    Acquired from Portuguese; established as a Union Territory.
    1962
    Puducherry
    14th Amendment
    Formerly French establishments; established as a Union Territory.
    1963
    Nagaland
    13th Amendment
    Created as the 16th state by separating Naga Hills from Assam.
    1966
    Haryana

    Created as the 17th state from Punjab.
    1971
    Himachal Pradesh

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 18th state.
    1972
    Manipur

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 19th state.
    1972
    Tripura

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 20th state.
    1972
    Meghalaya
    22nd Amendment
    Initially an autonomous state (1969), then became the 21st full state.
    1975
    Sikkim
    35th & 36th
    35th made it an “Associate State”; 36th made it the 22nd full state.
    1987
    Mizoram

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 23rd state.
    1987
    Arunachal Pradesh

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 24th state.
    1987
    Goa

    Separated from Daman & Diu to become the 25th state.
    2000
    Chhattisgarh

    Carved out of Madhya Pradesh (26th state).
    2000
    Uttarakhand

    Carved out of Uttar Pradesh (27th state).
    2000
    Jharkhand

    Carved out of Bihar (28th state).
    2014
    Telangana

    Bifurcated from Andhra Pradesh (29th state at the time).
    2019
    J&K
     and Ladakh


    State of J&K reconstituted into two Union Territories.
    2020
    DNH
     and DD


    Merged Dadra & Nagar Haveli
     and Daman & Diu
     into one UT.

    III. Notable Name Changes
    1969: Madras
     renamed to Tamil Nadu.
    1973: Mysore
     renamed to Karnataka.
    1973: Laccadive
    Minicoy
    , and Amindivi Islands
     renamed to Lakshadweep.
    2006: Pondicherry
     renamed to Puducherry.
    2007: Uttaranchal
     renamed to Uttarakhand.
    2011: Orissa
     renamed to Odisha











    Below is a chronological list of major changes to the Indian states and Union Territories (UTs), including the constitutional amendments that facilitated these changes.


    I. Major Structural Change (1956)
    1956 (7th Amendment Act): Abolished the four-fold classification of states (Part A, B, C, and D) and reorganized India into 14 States and 6 Union Territories based on the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. 

    II. State Formation & Chronological List (Post-1956)

    Year 
    State / UT Change
    Constitutional Amendment
    Details
    1960
    Gujarat

    Bifurcated from Bombay State; became the 15th state.
    1961
    Dadra & Nagar Haveli
    10th Amendment
    Converted from a liberated territory to a Union Territory.
    1962
    Goa, Daman & Diu
    12th Amendment
    Acquired from Portuguese; established as a Union Territory.
    1962
    Puducherry
    14th Amendment
    Formerly French establishments; established as a Union Territory.
    1963
    Nagaland
    13th Amendment
    Created as the 16th state by separating Naga Hills from Assam.
    1966
    Haryana

    Created as the 17th state from Punjab.
    1971
    Himachal Pradesh

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 18th state.
    1972
    Manipur

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 19th state.
    1972
    Tripura

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 20th state.
    1972
    Meghalaya
    22nd Amendment
    Initially an autonomous state (1969), then became the 21st full state.
    1975
    Sikkim
    35th & 36th
    35th made it an “Associate State”; 36th made it the 22nd full state.
    1987
    Mizoram

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 23rd state.
    1987
    Arunachal Pradesh

    Elevated from Union Territory to the 24th state.
    1987
    Goa

    Separated from Daman & Diu to become the 25th state.
    2000
    Chhattisgarh

    Carved out of Madhya Pradesh (26th state).
    2000
    Uttarakhand

    Carved out of Uttar Pradesh (27th state).
    2000
    Jharkhand

    Carved out of Bihar (28th state).
    2014
    Telangana

    Bifurcated from Andhra Pradesh (29th state at the time).
    2019
    J&K
     and Ladakh


    State of J&K reconstituted into two Union Territories.
    2020
    DNH
     and DD


    Merged Dadra & Nagar Haveli
     and Daman & Diu
     into one UT.

    III. Notable Name Changes
    1969: Madras
     renamed to Tamil Nadu.
    1973: Mysore
     renamed to Karnataka.
    1973: Laccadive
    Minicoy
    , and Amindivi Islands
     renamed to Lakshadweep.
    2006: Pondicherry
     renamed to Puducherry.
    2007: Uttaranchal
     renamed to Uttarakhand.
    2011: Orissa
     renamed to Odisha

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