The Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India contains

The Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India contains

provisions regarding the administration of tribal areas
the Union List, the State List and the Concurrent List
a list of recognized languages
provisions about the disqualification of Members of Legislatures on grounds of defection
This question was previously asked in
UPSC NDA-1 – 2015
The Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India is crucial for defining the distribution of legislative powers between the Union (Central) government and the State governments. It contains three lists:
1. **Union List:** Contains subjects on which the Parliament has exclusive power to make laws (e.g., defence, external affairs, railways, banking).
2. **State List:** Contains subjects on which the State Legislatures have exclusive power to make laws (e.g., public order, police, public health and sanitation, agriculture).
3. **Concurrent List:** Contains subjects on which both the Parliament and the State Legislatures can make laws (e.g., education, forests, trade unions, marriage).
Therefore, the Seventh Schedule contains the Union List, the State List, and the Concurrent List.
The Seventh Schedule operationalizes the federal structure of the Indian Constitution by demarcating the legislative domains of the central and state governments, avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction.
The other options refer to different schedules of the Constitution:
A) Provisions regarding the administration of tribal areas are in the Fifth and Sixth Schedules.
C) A list of recognized languages is in the Eighth Schedule.
D) Provisions about the disqualification of Members of Legislatures on grounds of defection are in the Tenth Schedule.
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