Notes of Chapter 5 Legislature: Political Science: Class 11: Part 2

Q. What are the privileges of the members of the Parliament?Ans: Several special privileges are available to the members of the Parliament so that they can carry out their functions in a free manner.They enjoy freedom of speech in their respective Houses and freedom from arrest during the sessions of the Parliament. Q.How can you … Read more

Notes of Chapter 5 Legislature : Political Science: Class 11th Part 1

Q. What is the composition of the Rajya Sabha? Ans: The Rajya Sabha consists of 250 members.Of these 12 members are nominated by the President from among the persons who have achieved distinction in the fields of Arts, Science, Literature or Social Service and the remaining 238 members are the representatives of States and Union … Read more

Gandhian View on Swaraj

Gandhian View on Swaraj

Swaraj for Gandhi is part of Truth which is God. According to Gandhi ,swaraj could be obtained only by intense suffering and struggle.It would never come as a gift.In an article ,Gandhi wrote that spreading disaffection against the British government in India was the Dharma of Indians.He warned the imperialist countries that domination over others would threaten the moral fibre of the great powers.Gandhi accepted the truth of the famous Mantra given by B.G.Tilak that Swaraj is the birth right of Indians.He said that the every ruler is alien that defies public opinion.Gandhi believed that Indians were entitled to freedom because of the immense sufferings they had undergone for it.The swaraj of Gandhi’s conception was to champion the interests of the down trodden and starving millions.He believed that every labourer should get enough remuneration to feed and clothe himself and his family.A government that doesn’t ensure this much is no government.It is anarchy,and thus should be resisted peacefully.


Gandhi dedicated his whole life to secure the freedom of India from imperialistic bondage.He pleaded for personal freedom and civic freedom.He also advocated freedom of speech and pen.This freedom was the foundation of Swaraj.He never accepted the theory of freedom as arbitrariness of license.Freedom results in self- denial for the sake of society.License means the desire to enjoy exclusive privileges even by resort to violence.Moral freedom for him lay not in the egoistic assertions of the claims of the individual ego but in identification with the spiritual being.Freedom in other words,means conquest of the empirical demands of the senses for the realisation of the transcendent self.


To Gandhi,freedom was a whole, Moral freedom as emancipation from the slavery of passions, National freedom as emancipation and realisation of truth, were all phases of freedom.Thus we see that Gandhi’s great gospel was that freedom is a whole.To him freedom was a process of growth in quest of an articulated system of coherent moral purposes and actions.A man who obtains freedom over his passions would not tolerate the social and economic exploitation of his neighbours because they are really his own selves.According to Gandhi,all war is unjust,but still the aspirant after freedom would distinguish between the aggressor and the defender,and render all moral support to the latter.He would not be bound down to the creeds and conventions of a particular society or nation but would embrace mankind.

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What is a Federation? Factors helping in the formation of a Federation and Features of a Federation :

Federation is the form of government which comes into existence by merging together of two or more small states.The term ‘Federation’ has been derived from a Latin word ‘foedus’ which means ‘agreement’ or ‘treaty’.Literally,federation means a contract between the small states to form a new state.When sovereign and independent states, either because they are too … Read more

Difference Between Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles of State Policy

Difference Between Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles of State Policy Fundamental Rights and directive principles of state policy aim at the welfare of the general public,yet they differ from each other in the following ways. 1. Fundamental rights are negative directions backed by the legal force while as directive principles are positive directions for the … Read more

POLITICAL PARTIES:Meaning and Functions:

A political party is a group operating to secure the control of a government.The main aim of a political party is to take part in the struggle for power.The persons of this organization i.e political party agree on some important matters of public policy. According to Gilchrist , A political party is an association of … Read more