CH 11 Grassroots Democracy – Part 2

CHAPTER 11

Grassroots Democracy – Part 2

Local Government in Rural Areas

Exploring Society: India and Beyond | Class Notes + Worksheet with Answers

 

The real India lives in its villages.

— M.K. Gandhi

 

6,00,000

Villages in India

1.4 Billion+

India’s Population

2/3rd

Population in Rural Areas

 

  📖  CHAPTER NOTES 

 

  1. Why Rural Local Government?

 

India has 6 lakh villages. People cannot run to Delhi or state capital for every local problem. They need a LOCAL system that is close to them, understands their needs, and can take quick decisions.

 

Gandhi

The real India lives in its villages. That is why local governance for rural India is at the heart of Indian democracy.

 

Panchayat: Village council — system of local self-government for rural India

Panchayati Raj: Three-tier system of local governance: village → block → district

Self-government: People govern themselves locally — not someone from far away

 

  1. The Three-Tier Panchayati Raj System

 

 

▲  TOP — DISTRICT LEVEL

District Panchayat / Zila Parishad

 

 

MIDDLE — BLOCK LEVEL

Block Panchayat / Panchayat Samiti / Mandal Parishad

 

 

▼  BASE — VILLAGE LEVEL (Closest to People)

Village Parishad / Gram Panchayat

 

 

Level

Institution

Key Functions

DISTRICT LEVEL

Zila Parishad / District Panchayat

Coordinates all blocks; district-wide education, health, infrastructure; receives state funds; top of the rural local govt pyramid

BLOCK LEVEL

Panchayat Samiti / Block Panchayat / Mandal Parishad

LINK between village and district; collects village plans; manages PM Gram Sadak Yojana (rural roads); allocates block funds

VILLAGE LEVEL

Gram Panchayat / Village Parishad

Closest to people; elected by Gram Sabha; Sarpanch as head; roads, water, sanitation, school, disputes, welfare schemes

 

  1. Gram Panchayat — Village Level

 

◆ Structure: Who is in it?

GRAM SABHA

GRAM PANCHAYAT

SUPPORT STAFF

All adult voters of the village. Both women and men. Meets to elect Gram Panchayat members and discuss local issues directly. The FOUNDATION of democracy.

Elected council members. Headed by Sarpanch/Pradhan. Makes all decisions for the village. Elected every 5 years. 1/3 seats reserved for women.

Panchayat Secretary — administrative work, records, meetings. Patwari — maintains land records; keeps old maps sometimes generations old!

 

◆ How It Works

  • Gram Sabha = all adult voters → they ELECT Gram Panchayat members
  • Gram Panchayat members then elect a Sarpanch/Pradhan (head)
  • Gram Sabha meetings: all villagers (men AND women) discuss issues and take decisions
  • More and more women are becoming Sarpanchs in recent years
  • One-third of seats reserved for women at ALL THREE levels
  • Special provisions ensure disadvantaged groups (SC/ST/OBC) can make their voice heard

 

Gram Sabha vs Gram Panchayat

GRAM SABHA = all voters (everyone attends and speaks freely). GRAM PANCHAYAT = elected smaller council that manages the village. Sabha elects the Panchayat.

 

  1. Exemplary Sarpanchs — Inspiring Stories

 

Sarpanch

Village / Location

Achievement

Dnyaneshwar Kamble

Tarangfal, Solapur, Maharashtra (2017)

First transgender Sarpanch. Defeated 6 candidates. Motto: lok seva, gram seva — Service to the village is service to the public.

Vandana Bahadur Maida

Khankhandvi, MP (Bhil community)

First female Sarpanch of her village. Convinced women to attend Sabha meetings. Addressed education and sanitation. Broke patriarchal norms.

Popatrao Baguji Pawar

Hiware Bazar, Ahmednagar, Maharashtra

Transformed a drought-prone village using rainwater harvesting, watershed conservation, lakhs of trees. Village became green and prosperous. Won Padma Shri (2020).

 

  1. Child-Friendly Panchayat Initiative

 

Panchayats must listen to EVERYONE — including children. The Child-Friendly Panchayat Initiative gives children a voice in decisions about their wellbeing.

 

  • Bal Sabha: Village assembly specifically for children to raise their issues
  • Bal Panchayat: Elected children’s council — children practice democracy

 

Place & Initiative

Work Done

Maharashtra — Bal Panchayat

Worked to eliminate child labour and child marriage. Convinced parents to send children to school. Advocated against early marriages for girls.

Sikkim — Sangkhu Radhu Khandu Gram Panchayat

Built compound walls for schools. Constructed school kitchens for hygienic midday meals. Declared a Child-Friendly Gram Panchayat.

Rajasthan — Children’s Parliament (Barefoot College)

Children aged 8-14 engaged in governance. Voter ID cards, elections, campaigning. Elected ‘Cabinet’ overseeing school management. Won World’s Children’s Honorary Award (2001).

 

  1. Panchayat Samiti & Zila Parishad

 

◆ Panchayat Samiti (Block Level) — The Middle Link

  • Sits BETWEEN the Gram Panchayat (village) and Zila Parishad (district)
  • Members: elected locals + Sarpanchs of nearby villages + local MLAs
  • Collects development plans from all Gram Panchayats in the block
  • Presents plans at district/state level to get funds allocated
  • Implements government schemes: Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (all-weather rural roads)
  • Composition differs state to state but purpose remains the same

 

◆ Zila Parishad (District Level) — The Top

  • Highest tier of Panchayati Raj at district level
  • Coordinates all development projects across the district
  • Manages district education, health, roads, water on a large scale
  • Receives state government funds and distributes to lower tiers

 

Key Fact

Even though structure differs from state to state, the GOAL is always the same — enable villagers to actively manage and develop their own area. True grassroots democracy!

 

  1. Panchayat vs Central Government

 

Aspect

Central Government

Gram Panchayat

Law-making body

Parliament (Lok Sabha + Rajya Sabha)

Gram Panchayat (elected by Gram Sabha)

Executive Head

Prime Minister

Sarpanch / Pradhan

Voters/Electorate

All adult citizens of India

All adult voters of village (Gram Sabha)

Level

National

Village

Admin Support

IAS/Civil Services, Cabinet

Panchayat Secretary, Patwari

Courts

Supreme Court, High Courts

Nyaya Panchayat (in some states)

Similarity

Both are representative democracies — people elect representatives to make decisions for them

Both hold regular meetings, debates, and elections

 

Similarity

Both Central Govt and Panchayat are DEMOCRATIC systems. Both have elections, representatives, executive heads, assemblies, and administration. The principle is identical — just at different scales!

 

  1. Arthashastra — Ancient Indian Governance Wisdom

 

Author: Kautilya (also known as Chanakya) — master of statecraft

Written: About 2,300 years ago

Contents: How to structure a state, make economy prosperous, duties of ruler, administration from village to capital

 

The king shall establish a sangrahana (sub-district HQ) for every 10 villages; a karvatika (district HQ) for every 100 villages; a dronamukha for every 400 villages; and a sthaniya (provincial HQ) for every 800 villages.

— Arthashastra — Kautilya

 

Arthashastra Term

Coverage

Role (Ancient)

Modern Equivalent

Sangrahana

Every 10 villages

Sub-district HQ

Block / Panchayat Samiti

Karvatika

Every 100 villages

District HQ

Zila Parishad / District

Dronamukha

Every 400 villages

Larger regional unit

Division / Sub-division

Sthaniya

Every 800 villages

Provincial HQ

State capital region

 

Amazing!

India’s modern three-tier Panchayati Raj system was already described in the Arthashastra 2,300 years ago! This shows the deep-rooted tradition of grassroots governance in India.

 

  1. Key Terms Glossary

 

Key Term

Meaning

Panchayat

Village council — the local self-government body in rural India

Panchayati Raj

The three-tier system of local self-government in rural India

Gram Sabha

Assembly of ALL adult voters of a village; the democratic foundation

Gram Panchayat

Elected village council; lowest tier; headed by Sarpanch

Sarpanch / Pradhan

Elected head/president of the Gram Panchayat

Panchayat Secretary

Administrative officer: calls meetings, maintains records

Patwari

Village officer who maintains land records and old maps

Panchayat Samiti

Block-level Panchayat — middle tier; link between village and district

Zila Parishad

District-level Panchayat — top tier of Panchayati Raj

Bal Sabha / Bal Panchayat

Children’s assembly/council to voice children’s issues

Reservation (1/3)

One-third seats reserved for women at all three Panchayati Raj levels

Arthashastra

Ancient governance text by Kautilya/Chanakya (~2,300 years old)

PM Gram Sadak Yojana

Government scheme: all-weather roads in rural areas

 

 

 

  📝  WORKSHEET WITH ANSWERS 

 

  1. Questions from Within the Chapter

 

◆ Think About It — Old Patwari Maps

Q1. How can old maps kept by the Patwari be helpful? What can they tell us about the past and present?

✅ Old maps kept by Patwari are useful in many ways: (1) Land records: They show original land ownership — useful for resolving land disputes in courts. (2) Environmental change: Old maps show rivers, ponds, forests that may have shifted or disappeared. Comparing old and new maps shows how the environment has changed. (3) Village history: Show how the village expanded, where old wells/roads were, where the village boundary used to be. (4) Common land: Identify which land belongs to the community (village commons) vs private ownership. (5) Legal evidence: In property disputes, old maps are accepted as official proof. In short, old maps are a living record of the village’s past and help us understand and plan its present and future.

 

◆ Think About It — Attention to Disadvantaged Sections

Q2. Why is it important for government to pay attention to disadvantaged sections of society?

✅ Disadvantaged sections (poor, women, SC/ST/minorities) need special attention because: (1) They often lack knowledge of their rights and cannot easily access government offices. (2) Democracy means equality — but disadvantaged groups often start at a lower level. Extra support helps level the playing field. (3) If one section is left behind, the whole village/country cannot develop truly. (4) They are often exploited — government protection prevents this. (5) Reserved seats (1/3 for women) ensure their voice is heard in Panchayati Raj. As Rigoberta Menchu Tum said: ‘There is no equality without development; no democracy without respect to the identity and dignity of peoples.’ Government must pay attention to ensure TRUE democracy.

 

◆ Let’s Explore — Central Govt vs Panchayat Comparison

Q3. What similarities and differences do you notice between Central government and Panchayat governance?

✅ SIMILARITIES: – Both are democracies — people elect representatives – Both have an elected head (PM / Sarpanch) – Both have an assembly for debate (Parliament / Gram Sabha) – Both have administrative support (IAS / Panchayat Secretary) – Both implement government laws and policies at their level  DIFFERENCES: – Scale: Central = entire nation; Gram Panchayat = one village/cluster – Power: Centre handles defence, foreign affairs, currency; Panchayat handles local roads, water, sanitation – Members: MPs elected by thousands; Panchayat members elected by small village community – Parliament has two houses (Lok Sabha + Rajya Sabha); Gram Panchayat has a single elected body – Top court at Centre is Supreme Court; villages have Nyaya Panchayat (in some states)

 

◆ Let’s Explore — Bal Panchayat Activity

Q4. If you formed a Bal Panchayat in class — what issues would be discussed, what challenges faced, and what solutions proposed?

✅ ISSUES Gram/Bal Sabha might discuss: – Potholes / bad roads to school making travel dangerous – Lack of clean drinking water in school – No proper toilets (open defecation) – Children dropping out of school (child labour, poverty) – Open garbage burning near school – Child marriage or child labour in the village – Animals straying into school campus – No streetlights making roads unsafe at night  CHALLENGES: – Parents may not agree (especially on girls’ education/child marriage) – Panchayat may have limited funds – Elders may not take children seriously  SOLUTIONS Bal Panchayat can propose: – Request Sarpanch to apply under government schemes – Awareness campaigns for parents about benefits of education – Write petitions to Panchayat Samiti or Zila Parishad for bigger issues – Invite NGOs to help the village

 

  1. Exercise Questions and Answers

 

Q1. Name the three tiers of Panchayati Raj. What are the key functions of each tier?

✅ THREE TIERS OF PANCHAYATI RAJ (bottom to top):  1. VILLAGE LEVEL — Gram Panchayat / Village Parishad Functions: Local roads and paths, water supply, sanitation (toilets), school maintenance, health centre, streetlights, resolving minor disputes, maintaining birth/death records, implementing welfare schemes (housing, ration cards), collecting local taxes. Elected by Gram Sabha, headed by Sarpanch.  2. BLOCK LEVEL — Panchayat Samiti / Block Panchayat Functions: Collects development plans from all village Panchayats in the block; allocates funds; manages block-level schools and health centres; implements Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (all-weather rural roads); link between village and district.  3. DISTRICT LEVEL — Zila Parishad Functions: Coordinates all development across the district; manages district schools, hospitals, roads, water projects; receives state funds and distributes to lower tiers; supervises all Panchayat Samitis in the district.

 

Q2. Write a letter to the Sarpanch about plastic bags lying on the roadside in the village.

✅ (See the model letter provided below — adapt name, village, district as needed)

 

To,

The Sarpanch,

Gram Panchayat, [Village Name], [District], [State]

 

Date: ___________

 

Subject: Request to address the problem of plastic bags on village roads

 

Respected Sarpanch ji,

 

I am a student of Class __ in [School Name]. I am writing to bring to your attention a serious problem facing our village — plastic bags and wrappers scattered on the roadsides, near the market, and around the school.

 

This is causing: (1) Animals eating plastic — it harms and can kill them. (2) Plastic blocking drainage — causing waterlogging. (3) The village looks dirty and unhealthy for residents.

 

I respectfully request you to: (1) Place dustbins at the market, school, and bus stop. (2) Organise an awareness drive about the harmful effects of plastic. (3) Ban single-use plastic bags in the village. (4) Arrange regular road cleaning.

 

I believe with your leadership, our village can become clean and beautiful. I am ready to help.

 

Yours sincerely,

[Your Name]

Class __, [School Name], [Village Name]

 

Q3. What type of person should be a Gram Panchayat member?

✅ A good Gram Panchayat member should be: (1) Honest — no corruption; handles public money responsibly (2) Aware of government rules and schemes to get funds for the village (3) Fair and inclusive — treats all villagers equally regardless of caste, religion, or gender (4) A good listener — hears everyone’s problems patiently (5) Hardworking — visits all parts of the village, attends all Gram Sabha meetings (6) Champion of women and children — ensures their issues are taken seriously (7) Transparent — shares information openly with the Gram Sabha (8) Locally rooted — knows the village’s specific needs and land records Example: Popatrao Pawar (Hiware Bazar) — transformed a drought village using knowledge, cooperation and hard work. He is an ideal Panchayat member.

 

Q4. Village school next to highway — students can’t cross safely. Options, Panchayati Raj institutions that help, and what students can do?

✅ OPTIONS TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM: (1) Build speed breakers / road bumps near the school (2) Install school zone warning signs on the highway (3) Paint a bright zebra crossing at the school gate (4) Request traffic police during school hours (5) Build a separate footpath beside the road (6) Request signal/pedestrian crossing from National Highway Authority  PANCHAYATI RAJ INSTITUTIONS TO APPROACH: – Gram Panchayat (village level): Raise the issue at Gram Sabha; write to Panchayat Samiti – Panchayat Samiti (block level): Allocate funds for speed breakers and signs; refer to district – Zila Parishad (district level): Coordinate with National/State Highway Authority for signals and crossing  WHAT STUDENTS CAN DO: – Write a letter to the Sarpanch requesting immediate action – Form a Bal Panchayat and present this issue at the Gram Sabha – Make a poster campaign about road safety near schools – Involve parents to collectively petition the Gram Panchayat – Ask school principal to write an official letter to the Panchayat

 

  1. The Big Questions

 

Q1. What are Panchayati Raj institutions?

✅ Panchayati Raj institutions are the THREE-TIER system of local self-government in rural India: (1) Gram Panchayat (village level) — elected by Gram Sabha; headed by Sarpanch; closest to the people (2) Panchayat Samiti (block level) — middle link between village and district (3) Zila Parishad (district level) — top tier; coordinates development across the whole district  They are a form of SELF-GOVERNMENT — the people themselves manage their local affairs. These institutions address local issues (water, roads, schools, health), promote development, ensure government schemes reach the grassroots, and give every citizen — including women and disadvantaged groups — a voice. Their goal: enable villagers to actively participate in managing and developing their own area.

 

Q2. What are the functions of Panchayati Raj institutions?

✅ Functions cover ALMOST ALL aspects of rural life: Gram Panchayat: local roads, water supply, sanitation, school and health centre upkeep, streetlights, dispute resolution, birth/death records, welfare schemes Panchayat Samiti: rural road construction (PM Gram Sadak Yojana), block-level schools and hospitals, coordinating village plans, allocating funds Zila Parishad: district-wide education, hospitals, roads, bridges, water projects, social welfare All together: agriculture, housing, water management, education, healthcare, cultural activities, social welfare. Additionally: Bal Panchayats give children a voice; 1/3 seat reservation empowers women.

 

Q3. Why are Panchayati Raj institutions important in governance and democracy?

✅ Panchayati Raj institutions are important because: (1) GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY: They bring democracy to the village level — people participate directly in decisions affecting their own lives (2) SELF-GOVERNANCE: Villages manage their affairs without running to distant capitals for every issue (3) LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: Elected local members understand the village’s specific needs better than any outsider (4) INCLUSION: Reserved seats (1/3 for women + seats for SC/ST/OBC) ensure every voice is heard (5) FASTER SOLUTIONS: Local problems get local solutions quickly — no bureaucratic delay (6) DEMOCRATIC TRAINING: Millions of ordinary citizens learn democracy by participating in Gram Sabhas (7) DEVELOPMENT REACH: Government schemes actually reach the last person through this system (8) ANCIENT TRADITION: As the Arthashastra shows, India has had village governance for 2,300+ years — Panchayati Raj continues this proud tradition

 

— END OF CHAPTER 11 NOTES AND WORKSHEET —

Prepared for classroom use | Reprint 2025-26

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