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Consider the following pairs : 1. Drought-Prone Area Programme - Ministry of Agriculture 2. Desert Development Programme - Ministry of Environment and Forests 3. National Watershed Development Project for Rainfed Areas - Ministry of Rural Development Which of the above pairs is/are correctly matched?
Explanation
The correct matching of the programmes with their respective Ministries is as follows:
- Drought-Prone Area Programme (DPAP): Implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development (Department of Land Resources). It aims to mitigate the impact of droughts on crop production, livestock, and land productivity.
- Desert Development Programme (DDP): Implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development (Department of Land Resources). Its objective is to control desertification and restore the ecological balance in desert areas.
- National Watershed Development Project for Rainfed Areas (NWDPRA): Implemented by the Ministry of Agriculture (Department of Agriculture & Cooperation). It focuses on improving agricultural production and productivity in rainfed areas through sustainable resource management.
Since none of the pairs are correctly matched, the correct answer is None.
PROVENANCE & STUDY PATTERN
Guest previewA classic 'Ministry Confusion' trap targeting the overlap between Agriculture, Rural Development, and Environment. While standard books (Majid Husain) discuss these schemes under 'Climate' or 'Regional Planning', they often bury the administrative ownership. The key is to distinguish 'Area Development' (Rural Dev) from 'Farming Systems' (Agriculture).
This question can be broken into the following sub-statements. Tap a statement sentence to jump into its detailed analysis.
- Explicitly states DPAP (and DDP) would be retransferred to the Department of Rural Development, not the Ministry of Agriculture.
- Implies DPAP responsibility lies with rural development bodies rather than the Ministry of Agriculture & Cooperation.
- States the Drought Prone Areas Programme was transferred to 'this department' which became the Ministry of Rural Reconstruction.
- Shows DPAP was managed by a rural development department/ministry rather than the Ministry of Agriculture.
States that in 2009 DPAP (with other watershed programmes) was consolidated under an 'Integrated Watershed Management Programme' covered under the Ministry of Rural Development.
A student could infer that administration shifted away from the Ministry of Agriculture and check timelines or ministry notifications after 2009 to test whether DPAP remained with Agriculture.
Describes DPAP as an integrated area development programme in the agricultural sector launched by the Central government in 1973–74.
A student could use this to hypothesize DPAP may originally have been run by agricultural authorities and then compare with later organisational changes.
Cites the 'Ministry of Agriculture' (alongside Ministry of Environment) as the source for the definition of 'drought prone area', showing Ministry of Agriculture involvement in drought-related policy/definitions.
A student could treat this as evidence of Agriculture Ministry involvement in drought matters and then look for administrative responsibility for specific programmes like DPAP.
Notes DPAP was one of several programmes brought together under the Integrated Rural Development Programme (IRDP) in 1978–79, indicating DPAP has been administratively reorganised into broader schemes.
A student could use this pattern of reorganising programmes to suspect DPAP's administrative home may have changed over time and verify which ministry oversaw later consolidated schemes.
Lists 'Effective implementation of Drought-Prone Area Programmes (DPAP)' among broader drought-mitigation steps, linking DPAP to multi-sectoral responses rather than a single ministry's domain.
A student could infer DPAP implementation may involve multiple ministries and therefore verify official ownership rather than assume it is solely with Agriculture.
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