I'm afraid the good pals in SO will shun me for asking for a ready solution.
You shouldn't be; this is silly. (Not saying that it doesn't happen, but when it does, it's silly, so you shouldn't be overly concerned with it.)
When people complain about questions that ask for a ready solution, they are really complaining about one of two problems:
A question that is inherently too broad—e.g., How do I build Facebook?
A question that does not contain enough background information to sufficiently contextualize it, thus making it too broad. (These are the type of questions where people commonly want to ask, "What have you tried?")
So those are the two problems that you need to avoid. I think you're on the right track with the background information you've provided in this question. However, I would suggest that you also provide sample code illustrating what you are trying to do, ideally in the form of a minimal, reproducible example.
Asking about both Angular and Django implementations in the same question would be a bad idea, because that's instantly too broad. If you want to ask about both, do it as two separate questions.
But, "How do I make the backend perform authentication validation and set a clearance flag in the session?", when asking along with additional supporting context, would be a valid Stack Overflow question.
However, don't ask for someone to build/implement/describe an authentication system. That is an example of problem #1: it is inherently too broad.
For architecture-style questions like "Should I implement authentication in the frontend or backend?", you might be able to ask on Software EngineeringSoftware Engineering, but please read their Help Centertheir Help Center to determine whether your question is actually on-topic there. Here is an example of the sort of frontend/backend architecture question that you might ask on Software Engineering. I would also recommend reviewing the FAQ explaining the difference between Stack Overflow and Software Engineering.