CHAPTER 10
Grassroots Democracy – Part 1
Governance
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Class Notes + Worksheet with Answers
The ruler protects dharma and dharma protects those who protect it. — Mahabharat — rājānam dharmagoptāram dharmo rakṣhati rakṣhitah |
There is no peace without justice; no justice without equality; no equality without development; no democracy without respect to the identity and dignity of cultures and peoples. — Rigoberta Menchú Tum |
📖 CHAPTER NOTES
- Why Do We Need Rules? — Introduction
Key Idea: When many people live together, disagreements arise. Rules are needed to maintain order and harmony
◆ Rules Everywhere — Examples
- Home: bedtime, mealtimes, helping with chores
- School: attendance, uniform, exam rules
- Road: traffic signals, lane driving, speed limits
- Workplace: office timings, safety rules
Key Point | If no one followed rules, society would not be able to function at all! |
◆ Important Definitions
- Governance: The process of taking decisions, organising society with rules, and ensuring they are followed
- Government: The group or system that makes rules and ensures they are followed
- Laws: The more important rules enforced by the government
Remember! | Rules are NOT fixed forever. Citizens can discuss, suggest, and demand changes to laws — just like students can ask for a school rule to be changed. |
- Three Organs (Branches) of Government
The three organs of government are: Legislature, Executive, and Judiciary. They MUST work separately but together — this is called Separation of Powers.
LEGISLATURE 📜 | EXECUTIVE ⚙️ | JUDICIARY ⚖️ |
• Makes new laws • Updates or removes old laws • Done by elected representatives (MPs/MLAs) • Parliament = Lok Sabha + Rajya Sabha • In cybercrime: passed the IT Act / cybercrime law | • Implements / executes the laws • Headed by PM (national) or CM (state) • President is nominal head • Includes ministers + police/enforcement agencies • In cybercrime: cyber police arrested the criminals | • System of courts • Decides if law was broken • Decides punishment • Can check if executive/legislature acted fairly • In cybercrime: court convicted and jailed criminals |
Cybercrime Example | Legislature passed cybercrime laws → Executive (cyber police) arrested criminals → Judiciary (court) convicted and jailed them. All three organs worked together! |
◆ Separation of Powers & Checks and Balances
- The three organs are kept SEPARATE — no single group controls all three
- ‘Checks and Balances’: Each organ can check what the other is doing
- If one organ acts beyond its role, others can restore balance
- Example: Judiciary can strike down a law passed by Legislature if it is unfair
Danger! | If all three organs were under one group’s control, there would be no check on power. That group could do anything — make laws to suit themselves, execute them, and also judge anyone who opposes them! |
- Three Levels (Tiers) of Government
India’s government operates at THREE levels. Think of it like fixing a light bulb: (1) Check the bulb yourself → Local level. (2) Call an electrician → State level. (3) Go to Electricity Board → National level.
Level | Scope | Examples of Functions |
LOCAL GOVT 🏘️ | Town / village level | Panchayat (villages), Municipal Corporation/Council (cities), handles local roads, water supply, sanitation, schools |
STATE GOVT 🏛️ | State level | Police & law and order, health, education, agriculture, irrigation, local government; headed by CM + Governor |
CENTRAL GOVT 🏛️🇮🇳 | National level | Defence, foreign affairs, currency, communications, atomic energy, interstate commerce, national policies; headed by PM + President |
◆ Flood Example — How Three Levels Work Together
- Small local flood → Local government handles it
- Flood affects several towns → State government sends rescue teams
- Massive flood across many regions → Central government sends army, relief supplies
◆ Government Functions — National vs State (Fig 10.5)
Organ / Aspect | CENTRAL GOVT (National) | STATE GOVT |
Judiciary | Supreme Court of India | High Court (one per state) |
Legislature | Two houses: Lok Sabha + Rajya Sabha (formulate national laws) | One Vidhan Sabha (State Assembly); some states have two houses |
Executive Head | President (nominal head, Supreme Commander of Armed Forces); Prime Minister (actual executive head) | Governor (nominal head); Chief Minister (actual executive head) |
Key Functions | Defence, foreign affairs, atomic energy, communications, currency, interstate commerce, education, national policies | Police & law order, public health, education, agriculture, irrigation, local government, implementing central laws |
Don’t Miss! | Government of India motto: Satyameva Jayate (Truth alone triumphs). Supreme Court motto: Yato Dharmastato Jayah (Where there is dharma, there is victory). |
- Democracy
Origin of word: Greek — demos (people) + kratos (rule/power) = Rule of the people
Definition: A system where people have a say in how their country is governed
◆ Types of Democracy
Type | Meaning | Example |
Direct Democracy | Every person votes directly on each decision | Class votes by raising hands to choose picnic spot A or B |
Representative Democracy | People elect representatives who then make decisions on their behalf | Citizens vote for MLAs (state) and MPs (national) who sit in assemblies and make laws |
Grassroots Democracy | System that enables ordinary citizens (the ‘base of the pyramid’) to participate in decisions affecting them | Panchayat, local body elections, village assemblies (Gram Sabha) — will study in next chapters |
◆ Key Facts about Indian Democracy
- India is a REPRESENTATIVE DEMOCRACY — citizens elect MLAs and MPs
- India is the world’s LARGEST democracy
- In 2024: about 970 MILLION voters in India!
- All Indian citizens above age 18 have the right to vote
- Elected members debate and discuss laws in assemblies through dialogue
Class → Country | Class representative = MLA/MP logic. Just like your class elects a monitor/representative to go to the principal, citizens elect MLAs (state) and MPs (national) to represent them in assemblies. |
- Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam — A Inspiring President
Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam — 11th President of India (2002–2007) 🚀 |
Born 1931 in Rameswaram, Tamil Nadu. Scientist, ‘Missile Man of India’ — key role in space, missile and nuclear programmes. Though President was a nominal position, he inspired millions through his love for youth, education and innovation. • F.A.I.L. = First Attempt In Learning • E.N.D. = Effort Never Dies • N.O. = Next Opportunity • Dream is not what you see while sleeping — it is what doesn’t let you sleep. • 4 keys: Great aim + Knowledge + Hard work + Perseverance = Anything can be achieved |
- Key Terms Glossary
Key Term | Meaning |
Governance | The process of taking decisions, organising society with rules, and ensuring they are followed |
Government | The group or system that makes rules (laws) and ensures they are followed |
Law | An important rule enforced by the government |
Legislature | Organ that MAKES laws; Parliament (national) or Vidhan Sabha (state) |
Executive | Organ that IMPLEMENTS laws; PM/CM and their ministers and agencies |
Judiciary | System of courts that JUDGES if laws are broken and gives punishment |
Separation of Powers | Keeping the three organs separate so no one group has too much power |
Checks and Balances | Each organ can check what the others are doing and restore balance |
Democracy | Rule of the people (Greek: demos = people, kratos = rule/power) |
Representative Democracy | Citizens elect representatives (MLAs/MPs) who make decisions for them |
Direct Democracy | Every citizen votes directly on each issue/decision |
Grassroots Democracy | System that enables ordinary citizens to participate in decisions affecting them |
MLA | Member of Legislative Assembly — elected representative at STATE level |
MP | Member of Parliament — elected representative at NATIONAL level |
Nominal Head | A leader in name only; does not actually run the government (e.g., President, Governor) |
Lok Sabha | Lower house of Indian Parliament — directly elected by citizens |
Rajya Sabha | Upper house of Indian Parliament — elected by state legislatures |
📝 WORKSHEET WITH ANSWERS
- Questions from Within the Chapter
◆ Let’s Explore — Fig 10.1 (Two Traffic Pictures)
Q1. Describe the two pictures in Fig 10.1. What differences do you see? Connect with rules. |
✅ Picture 1 (top): Organised traffic — vehicles in lanes, pedestrians using zebra crossing, traffic signals working. Roads are clear and everyone is moving safely. |
◆ Let’s Explore — Public Services (Fig 10.2)
Q2. Identify the public service categories in Fig 10.2. What role does the government play? |
✅ The 10 pictures show these government services: |
◆ Let’s Explore — Three Organs and Cybercrime
Q3. Explain how the three government organs are at work in the case of cybercriminals. |
✅ In the cybercrime example, all three organs worked together: |
◆ Let’s Explore — What if All Three Organs Were Under One Group?
Q4. Imagine all three organs under the same group’s control. What disorder might result? |
✅ If one group controls all three organs: – Legislature: They would make laws only to benefit themselves – |
◆ Let’s Explore — Government Functions Affecting Your Life
Q5. From Fig 10.5, which functions affect your life the most? How do adults interact with government? |
✅ Functions affecting students the most: – |
- Exercise Questions and Answers
Q1. What is the meaning of democracy? What is the difference between direct and representative democracy? |
✅ Democracy: The word comes from Greek — demos (people) + kratos (power). It means ‘rule of the people’ — a system where people have a say in how their country is governed. |
Q2. Recall the three organs of government. What are their different roles? |
✅ The three organs (branches) of government are: |
Q3. Why do we need three tiers of government? |
✅ We need three tiers (levels) of government because different problems are best solved at different levels: |
Q4. Project: COVID-19 lockdown — Which tiers were involved? What was each organ’s role? |
✅ COVID-19 Pandemic Response — All three tiers and all three organs worked: |
- The Big Questions
Q1. What is the meaning of ‘governance’? |
✅ Governance is the process of taking decisions, organising society’s life with different sets of rules, and ensuring that those rules are followed. (1) Making decisions (2) Creating rules/laws to organise society (3) Ensuring those laws are followed (4) Providing justice when laws are broken. |
Q2. Why do we need a government? |
✅ We need a government because: (2) Public services: Like building roads, run hospitals, maintain armies (6) Defence: To protect citizens from external threats. |
Q3. What is the meaning of ‘democracy’? Why is it important? |
✅ Democracy: The word comes from Greek — demos (people) + kratos (power). It means ‘rule of the people’ — a system where people have a say in how their country is governed. (2) Accountability: Elected leaders can be changed if they do not work well |
— END OF CHAPTER 10 NOTES AND WORKSHEET —
Prepared for classroom use | Reprint 2025-26
