Panchayati Raj

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Panchayati raj

1.1 Recommendations of Balwant Rai


Mehta Committee

For other uses, see Panchayat (disambiguation)


The panchayati raj is a South Asian political system
mainly in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal. It is the
oldest system of local government in the Indian subcontinent. The word panchayat literally means assembly
(ayat) of ve (panch) wise and respected elders chosen
and accepted by the local community. However, there
are dierent forms of assemblies. Traditionally, these
assemblies settled disputes between individuals and villages. Modern Indian government has decentralized several administrative functions to the local level, empowering elected gram panchayats. Gram panchayats are not to
be confused with the unelected khap panchayats (or caste
panchayats) found in some parts of Northern India.[1]

The Balwant Rai Mehta Committee, headed by MP


Balwantrai Mehta was a committee appointed by the
Government of India in January 1957 to examine the
working of the Community Development Programme
(1952) and the National Extension Service (1953) and
to suggest measures for their better working. The recommendations of the committee were approved by NDC
in January 1958 and this set the stage for the launching of Panchayati Raj Institutions throughout the country. The committee recommended the establishment of
the scheme of democratic decentralisation which nally
came to be known as Panchayati Raj.
(i) Establishment of a 3-tier Panchayati Raj system Gram Panchayat at the village level, Panchayat Samiti at
the block level, and Zila Parishad at the district level.

The panchayat raj system was rst adopted by state of Rajsthan in Nagor district on 2nd Oct 1958.Second state was
Andhra Pradesh.While the Maharashtra was the Ninth
state. This system was adopted by state governments during the 1950s and 60s, as laws were passed to establish
panchayats in various states. It also found backing in the
Indian Constitution, with the 73rd amendment in 1992
to accommodate the idea. The Amendment Act of 1992
contains provision for devolution of powers and responsibilities to the panchayats both for the preparation of economic development plans and social justice, as well as
for implementation in relation to 29 subjects listed in the
eleventh schedule of the constitution.[2]

Panchayati raj

Panchayati Raj is a system of governance in which gram


panchayats are the basic unit of administrations . It has
3 levels: Gram (village, it can comprise more than one
village), Janpad (taluka or block) and Zilla (district).

The term panchayati raj is an ancient concept that has


been adopted by the people of Bharat for their local administration of village. Raj l means rule. Mahatma
Gandhi advocated Panchayati Raj, a decentralized form
[2]
of Government where each village are responsible for its The panchayats receive funds from three sources:
own aairs, as the foundation of Indias political system.
1. Local body grants, as recommended by the Central
The term for such a vision was Gram Swaraj (village
Finance Commission
self-governance).
The leader of the panchayat was generally called the
mukhiya or sarpanch, a position which is elected.

2. Funds for implementation of centrally sponsored


schemes

Various Committees on Panchayati Raj :

3. Funds released by the state governments on the recommendations of the State Finance Commissions

1.Balwant Rai Mehta : Estd 1957


2.V.T.Krishnammachari : 1960

In the history of Panchayati Raj in India, on 24


April 1993, the Constitutional (73rd Amendment) Act
1992 came into force to provide constitutional status
to the Panchayati Raj institutions. This act was extended to Panchayats in the tribal areas of eight states,
namely Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh,
Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and Rajasthan

3.Takhatmal Jain Study Group: 1966


4.Ashok Mehta Committee : 1977
5.g.v.k rao committee :1985
6.Sarkaria Commission : 1986
7.Dr.L.M.Singhvi Committee:1987
1

starting 24 December 1996. Currently, the Panchayati Raj system exists in all the states except Nagaland,
Meghalaya and Mizoram, and in all Union Territories except Delhi.[3] The Balwant Rai Mehta Committee was
a committee appointed by the Government of India in
January 1957 to examine the working of the Community
Development Programme (1952) The Act aims to provide a 3-tier system of Panchayati Raj for all States having
a population of over 2 million, to hold Panchayat elections
regularly every 5 years, to provide seats reservations for
scheduled castes, scheduled tribes and women; to appoint
a State Finance Commission to make recommendations
as regards to the nancial powers of the Panchayats and
to constitute a District Planning Committee to prepare a
development plan draft for the district. The 3-tier system
of Panchayati Raj consists:
1. Village-level Panchayats

of the cooperative societies and one of the marketing services), and some elected members.
The samiti is elected for 5 years and is headed by the
Chairman and the Deputy Chairman.

2.2 Departments
The common departments in the Samiti are as follows:
1. General administration
2. Finance
3. Public work
4. Agriculture

2. Block-level Panchayats

5. Health

3. District-level Panchayats.

6. Education

Powers and responsibilities are delegated to panchayats at


the appropriate level:
Preparation of the economic development plan and
social justice plan.

BLOCK PANCHAYAT

7. Social welfare
8. Information technology,
9. Water Supply Dept.

10. Animal Husbandry and others.


Implementation of schemes for economic development and social justice in relation to 29 subjects
given in the Eleventh Schedule of the Constitution. There is an ocer for every department. A government
appointed Block Development Ocer (BDO) is the ex To levy and collect appropriate taxes, duties, tolls ecutive ocer to the Samiti and the chief of its adminand fees.
istration.BDO is responsible for his work to the CEO of
ZP.

Block panchayat
2.3 Functions

A block panchayat (panchayat samiti) is a local government body at the tehsil or taluka level in India. This
body works for the villages of the tehsil or taluka that together are called a Development Block. The panchayat
samiti is the link between the gram panchayat and the
district administration. There are a number of variations
of this institution in dierent states. It is known as Mandal Praja Parishad in Andhra Pradesh, Taluka panchayat
in Gujarat, Mandal Panchayat in Karnataka, Panchayat
Samiti in Maharashtra etc. In general, the block panchayat is a form of the Panchayati raj but at a higher level.

2.1

Constituency

1. Implementation schemes for the development of


agriculture.
2. Establishment of primary health centres and primary schools.
3. Supply of drinking water, drainage and construction/repair of roads.
4. Development of cottage and small-scale industries,
and the opening of cooperative societies.
5. Establishment of youth organisations.

The constituency is composed of ex-ocial members (all


sarpanchas of the panchayat samiti area, the MPs and 2.4 Sources of income
MLAs of the area and the SDO of the subdivision), coopt members (representatives of SC/ST and women), as- The main source of income of the panchayat samiti are
sociate members (a farmer of the area, a representative grants-in-aid and loans from the State Government.

District level panchayat

6 References

The governing system at district level in Panchayat Raj


is also popularly known as Zila Parishad. Chief of administration is an ocer from IAS cadre.

[1] Rohit Mullick & Neelam Raaj (9 September 2007).


Panchayats turn into kangaroo courts. The Times of India.

Functions:

[2] India 2007, p. 696, Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India

1. Provide essential services and facilities to the rural


population
2. Supply improved seeds to farmers. Inform them of
new farming techniques
3. Set up and run schools and libraries in the rural areas

[3] panchayat.nic.in
[4] 50pc reservation for women in panchayats - Oneindia
News. News.oneindia.in (2009-08-27). Retrieved on
2013-07-28.
[5] 50% reservation for women in AP, Bihar Panchayats.
Sify.com (2011-11-25). Retrieved on 2013-07-28.

4. Start Primary Health Centers and hospitals in vil- Sources


lages. Start vaccination drives against epidemics
Article 9374468, Britannica.com.
5. Execute plans for the development of the scheduled
Nepal glossary, lcweb2.loc.gov.
castes and tribes. Run ashramshalas for adivasi children. Set up free hostels for them
Article 333357, zeenews.com
6. Encourage entrepreneurs to start small-scale industries and implement rural employment schemes

Article India994-07, hrw.org.


Panchayati raj Recruitment, Exambuzzer.com

7. Construct bridges, roads & other public facilities and


their maintenance
8. Provide employment
Sources of Income:
1. Taxes on water, pilgrimage, markets, etc.
2. Fixed grant from the State Government in proportion with the land revenue and money for works and
schemes assigned to the Parishad.

Reservation for women in PRIs


in India

The Union Cabinet of the Government of India, on 27


August 2009, approved 50% reservation for women in
PRIs (Panchayati Raj Institutions). The Indian states
which have already implemented 50% reservation for
women in PRIs are Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Uttarakhand
and Himachal Pradesh.[4] As of 25 November 2011, the
states of Andhra Pradesh, Chhatisgarh, Jharkhand, Kerala, Maharastra, Orissa, Rajasthan and Tripura also reserve 50% of their posts for women.[5]

See also
Local self-government in India

7 Further reading
Subrata K. Mitra and V.B. Singh. 1999. Democracy and Social Change in India: A Cross-Sectional
Analysis of the National Electorate. New Delhi:
Sage Publications. ISBN 81-7036-809-X (India
HB) ISBN 0-7619-9344-4 (U.S. HB).
Subrata K. Mitra. 2001. Making local government
work: Local elites, panchayati raj and governance
in India, in: Atul Kohli (Ed.). The Success of Indias Democracy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Subrata K. Mitra.
2003.
Politics in India, in Almond, Gabriel/Bingham Powell/Russell
Dalton/Kaare Strm (Eds.), Comparative Politics
Today. 8th edition. New York: Addison-WesleyLongman, pp. 634684.

8 External links
Ministry of Panchayati Raj, Government of India
Panchayati Raj
See the entry on Panchayat in Encyclopdia Britannica
A Feature on the Women of the Indian Panchayats,
with video, by the International Museum of Women.

9 TEXT AND IMAGE SOURCES, CONTRIBUTORS, AND LICENSES

Text and image sources, contributors, and licenses

9.1

Text

Panchayati raj Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panchayati%20raj?oldid=633666060 Contributors: GTBacchus, Skysmith, Cncs


wikipedia, Everyking, Antandrus, OverlordQ, Shahab, Rich Farmbrough, Dbachmann, Kwamikagami, Shenme, Geschichte, Zachlipton,
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9.2

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9.3

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