Panchayati Raj
Panchayati Raj
Panchayati Raj
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
3. Funds released by the state governments on the recommendations of the State Finance Commissions
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
BLOCK PANCHAYAT
7. Social welfare
8. Information technology,
9. Water Supply Dept.
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
6 References
Functions:
[2] India 2007, p. 696, Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India
[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.
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.
9.1
Text
9.2
Images
9.3
Content license