Govt. Exams
Entrance Exams
British legal codification (IPC 1860, CPC 1908) and English-based judicial hierarchy created institutional structures that became the foundation of independent India's legal system.
The Morley-Minto Reforms expanded Indian representation slightly but introduced separate electorates for Muslims, a significant constitutional innovation that institutionalized communal divisions.
British administrative reorganization imposed uniform, hierarchical structures across India for efficient revenue collection and control, replacing diverse pre-colonial administrative traditions adapted to local contexts.
Enacted following the partition of Bengal and growing nationalist agitation, this act restricted public meetings and assemblies deemed seditious, targeting Indian nationalist movements.
The Ryotwari system dealt directly with individual peasants as revenue payers, avoiding the zamindari intermediaries, but peasants still faced heavy revenue burdens and land alienation.
Cornwallis's administrative reforms created a structured, European-dominated civil service, effectively excluding Indians from higher positions and cementing British control.
The Ilbert Bill sought to allow Indian judges to try European defendants, but faced fierce opposition from British settlers who opposed placing themselves under Indian judicial authority, revealing racial hierarchies in colonial society.
The Charter Act of 1833 theoretically opened the Civil Service to Indians (though practically few were appointed) and formally abolished slavery in British India.
The Permanent Settlement fixed land revenue in perpetuity, which initially seemed beneficial but ultimately created a system where zamindars had no incentive to improve lands or reduce peasant exploitation.
Under Lord Minto, this act required newspapers to deposit securities and imposed strict penalties for 'seditious' writings, effectively muzzling nationalist newspapers demanding independence.