Union & Its Territory – Complete UPSC & UPPSC Polity Notes (Articles 1–4)

The Part I (Articles 1 to 4) of the Indian Constitution deals with the Union & its Territory. It defines what constitutes India (Bharat), its political boundaries, formation of states, alteration of state boundaries, names of states, and acquisition of new territories. For UPSC & UPPSC, this topic is highly important because it forms the foundation of Indian federalism and territorial structure.


Article 1 – Name and Territory of the Union

Article 1(1) — “India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States.”

🔹 The name of the country is India (Bharat)
🔹 India is described as a Union of States, not a federation.

Why Constitution uses “Union of States” instead of “Federation of States”

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar explained:

  • The Union is indestructible
  • States cannot secede from the Union
  • Indian federation is created not by agreement of states, but by the Constitution itself

Article 1(2) — Territory of India includes:

  1. Territories of the States
  2. Union Territories
  3. Territories that may be acquired

Article 1(3) — Three Components of “India’s Territory”

State Territory : 28 States
Union Territory : 8 UTs
Acquired Territory : Any territory India acquires in future


Article 2 – Admission or Establishment of New States

Empowers Parliament to:

  • Admit new states into the Union
  • Establish new states on terms & conditions decided by Parliament

🔹 Example: Sikkim became a full state in 1975.


Article 3 – Formation of New States and Alteration of Areas / Boundaries / Names

Parliament can change:

Formation of new : State New states can be created
Increase area : Add territory
Diminish area : Reduce territory
Alter boundaries. : Restructure borders
Alter name. : Change name of any state

🔹 Mandatory Step

Before changing boundaries/ name/ area of a state — ➡️ President must seek the opinion of the State Legislature.
❗ But — State’s opinion is not binding.

Examples

Andhra Pradesh split into Telangana : 2014
Uttaranchal renamed Uttarakhand : 2007
Orissa renamed Odisha : 2011


Article 4 – Laws under Article 2 & 3 are Constitutional Amendments

  • Any law passed under Article 2 or 3 automatically amends the Constitution
  • ❗ But does not require the procedure of Article 368 ➡️ Means — Simple majority in Parliament is enough, not special majority.

Meaning of Territory vs. State Boundaries

Territory : Physical area of India
State : Administrative & political division
Nation : People + Territory + Government + Sovereignty

Union & Its Territory – Complete UPSC & UPPSC Polity Notes (Articles 1–4)

Why UPSC asks questions from Articles 1–4

Because these Articles reflect core concepts of:

  • Federalism
  • Union–State Relations
  • Legislative supremacy of Parliament
  • Integrity of India

Summary (Quick Revision Table)

Article 1 : Name & Territory. : India = Bharat = Union of States
Article 2 : New States : Admission / establishment of new states
Article 3 : Reorganization. : Change area, name, boundaries
Article 4 : Constitutional Amendment : Laws under Article 2 & 3 amend Constitution, simple majority


Important Facts for UPSC / UPPSC

India is a Union of States (not a federation)
Parliament has supreme power in territorial matters
States cannot secede
✔ Acquired territories automatically become part of India
President refers proposals to State Legislature, opinion not binding


Previous Year Questions (PYQs)

UPSC PYQs

1️⃣ “Why is India called a ‘Union of States’ and not a federation of states?” — 5 marks
2️⃣ Explain the powers of Parliament under Article 3 for reorganization of states. — 10 marks

UPPSC PYQs

1️⃣ Write short notes on Article 2 and Article 3 of the Constitution.
2️⃣ Discuss the constitutional provisions regarding alteration of the name and boundaries of states.


FAQs for Exam Preparation

Q1: Can a State stop Parliament from altering its boundary?
➡ No. State’s opinion is consulted but not binding.

Q2: Can Parliament change the name of a State?
➡ Yes — under Article 3.

Q3: Does Article 4 require special majority?
➡ No — Simple majority is enough.

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