Grassroots Democracy – Part 3
Local Government in Urban Areas
Opening Quote & Big Questions
Constituent Assembly Debates, 13 October 1949
- What are urban local bodies and what are their functions?
- Why are they important in governance and democracy?
This chapter is Part 3 of "Grassroots Democracy." Chapter 11 covered rural local government (Panchayati Raj) — the left side of the pyramid. Chapter 12 now covers urban local government — the right side of the same pyramid (Fig. 12.2).
The broader concept introduced in earlier chapters is participatory democracy — in a democracy, good governance empowers citizens so they may actively participate in their country's functioning, at the rural, regional, urban, state or national level.
The Three-Tier Governance Pyramid (Fig. 12.2)
Before exploring urban governance, the chapter presents an overall pyramid of the Indian system of governance — from rural to national. The base of the pyramid is the local level (closer to the people), while the top is the national level.
| Top — National | Union Government at the national level |
| State Level | State Government |
| Local Government | Divided into two streams: Rural and Urban |
| Rural Stream | Panchayati Raj Institutions — three tiers: Zila Panchayat → Panchayat Samiti → Gram Panchayat → Gram Sabha (covered in Ch. 11) |
| Urban Stream | Urban Local Bodies — Municipal Corporation or Municipal Council or City Council (Nagar Panchayat) → Ward Committee → People of the Ward |
The chapter asks students to compare the Panchayati Raj system (left side) with urban local government (right side) in Fig. 12.2 and identify similarities and differences:
- Similarity: Both have elected members representing citizens; both are decentralised; both have a local participatory layer (Gram Sabha ↔ People of the Ward).
- Difference: Urban bodies are more complex and diverse due to the larger, more varied urban population; terminology and tiers differ.
Urban Local Bodies — What & Why
Local government structures in urban areas are called 'urban local bodies'.
| Definition | Local government structures in urban areas. They are decentralised institutions of governance. |
| Decentralisation | Instead of operating under a central authority at the top, the local communities have a direct say on how their areas are managed or the issues they face. |
| Purpose | A mechanism for citizens living in an area to come together and take decisions about what is best for them. |
| Why Urban Governance is Complex | Cities are generally more complex and diverse than villages or towns — more people, more communities, more varied needs — so the urban governance system also needs to be more complex. |
| Constitutional Basis | Urban local bodies are part of India's democratic structure, empowering citizens at the grassroots level in urban areas. |
The NCERT asks: "Why is a city like Kolkata, Chennai or Mumbai more complex and diverse than a village or a town?"
Reason: Cities have diverse communities — people from different religions, languages, castes, economic backgrounds, professions. This diversity creates more complex governance needs compared to a relatively homogeneous village.
Wards & Ward Committees
| Division | Cities and towns are divided into smaller units called 'wards'. |
| Ward Committees | Each ward has a ward committee that facilitates local activities and reports local problems to authorities. |
| Activities Facilitated | Conducting health camps; organising campaigns against the use of single-use plastics; and similar civic activities. |
| Monitoring Role | Ward committees keep an eye on things that might go wrong — a water leak, a blocked drain, a damaged road — and report such problems to the authorities. |
| Variation Across States | The precise functioning of wards differs from State to State, depending on the rules they make. |
| Representation | At the local level — People of the Ward (the urban equivalent of Gram Sabha). |
Functions of Urban Local Bodies
Urban local bodies are responsible for a wide range of functions that directly affect citizens' lives:
| Infrastructure | Helping take care of the infrastructure of the city/town — roads, bridges, public facilities. |
| Burial Grounds | Maintaining the burial ground. |
| Waste Management | Garbage collection and disposal. |
| Government Schemes | Checking the implementation of government schemes. |
| Taxation | Collecting local taxes and fines. |
| Development Planning | Have some role in planning for the area's economic and social development. |
The NCERT carefully says urban local bodies "also have some role in planning for the area's economic and social development" — this "some role" is deliberate. Full planning authority rests higher up in the system; ULBs have a partial/advisory role in development planning.
Citizen Duties in Participatory Democracy
For urban local bodies to perform their functions efficiently, people living in the city must also perform their duties — they must show care and concern for their area. This is the core of participatory democracy.
| Waste Segregation | If people carefully follow instructions regarding waste segregation, garbage collection becomes easier for the local body. |
| Reporting Water Leakage | If citizens notice a water leakage in a street, reporting it promptly will prevent further wastage of precious water. |
The NCERT asks students to think of four or five more actions responsible citizens might take:
- Not littering in public spaces
- Paying local taxes honestly and on time
- Participating in ward meetings / public consultations
- Reporting damaged roads or broken streetlights to the municipality
- Planting trees and maintaining public gardens
- Not encroaching on public/footpath space
Historical Fact — Oldest Municipal Institution in India
The Madras Corporation (now Greater Chennai Corporation), established on 29 September 1688, is the oldest municipal institution in India.
| Current Name | Greater Chennai Corporation |
| Established | 29 September 1688 |
| Significance | Oldest municipal institution in India |
| Origin | The East India Company issued a charter the previous year (1687) constituting the town of 'Fort St. George' and all territories within 16 km from the Fort into a corporation. |
| Formal Start of Municipal Administration | A Parliamentary Act of 1792 gave the Madras Corporation power to levy municipal taxes in the city — this is when municipal administration properly began. |
- Oldest = Madras Corporation (Greater Chennai Corporation)
- Year = 1688 (29 September)
- Charter by = East India Company (1687)
- Town = Fort St. George
- Radius = 16 km from the Fort
- Tax power granted = Parliamentary Act of 1792
- Mumbai's corporation = Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (originally Bombay Municipal Corporation) — created in 1865 [from Fig. 12.1]
Services of the Indore Municipal Corporation (Fig. 12.4)
Fig. 12.4 in the NCERT shows a simplified list of services offered by the Indore Municipal Corporation. This is a very important figure — it illustrates what urban local bodies do in practice.
*CRM = Citizen Relationship Management — the portal/mechanism for citizens to request services and lodge grievances.
| Property Tax | Collection of property tax from citizens — a primary revenue source for the corporation. |
| Water Charges | Collection of water charges for municipal water supply. |
| Solid Waste Management | Garbage collection, segregation, and disposal — solid waste management. |
| Business / Hoardings / Trade Licenses | Issuing licenses for businesses, hoardings, and trade. |
| CRM — Marriage Certificate | Issuing marriage certificates via Citizen Relationship Management portal. |
| CRM — Fire Services | Fire services on request via CRM. |
| CRM — Various Licenses | Issuing various other licenses through CRM. |
| CRM — Water Tanker / Debris Clearance | Providing water tankers and debris clearance services via CRM. |
| Tree Cutting & Tree Transportation | Managing tree cutting and tree transportation. |
| CRM — Grievances | Citizens can lodge grievances through the CRM system. |
CRM — Services On Request (the bottom section of Fig. 12.4):
CRM stands for Citizen Relationship Management. It is a technology-based system used by urban local bodies to manage citizen service requests and grievances. The NCERT footnote explicitly defines this: "*CRM: Citizen Relationship Management."
The note also clarifies: "(The list of services offered by the Indore Municipal Corporation is simplified here.)" — meaning the actual list is longer.
The NCERT hints (LET'S EXPLORE): look at Fig. 12.4 to find how ULBs fund their activities. The answer is visible in the services:
- Property Tax — a direct tax revenue
- Water Charges — a user fee/charge
- Trade & Business Licenses — fee-based
- Various CRM services — many are paid services (e.g., Water Tanker, Ambulance, Auditorium booking)
- Plus: Grants from State and Central Government, fines and penalties, etc.
Indore — Swachh Survekshan (Think About It)
Indore in Madhya Pradesh has been awarded the cleanest city in India under the Swachh Survekshan government scheme for seven years in a row.
| City | Indore |
| State | Madhya Pradesh |
| Award | Cleanest city in India |
| Under Scheme | Swachh Survekshan (government scheme) |
| Consecutive Years | Seven years in a row |
| Role of Citizens | Citizens played a key role — through waste segregation at source, not littering, cooperating with municipal workers, reporting issues, etc. This is participatory democracy in action. |
"Indore in Madhya Pradesh has been awarded the cleanest city in India under the Swachh Survekshan government scheme for seven years in a row. What could have been the role of Indore citizens in this achievement?"
Answer Pointers: Citizens segregated waste at home; cooperated with solid waste management teams; avoided open dumping; reported issues via CRM grievances; participated in awareness campaigns; paid taxes enabling better infrastructure; formed community groups for cleanliness.
Classification of Urban Bodies by Population
Not all cities have the same type of urban local body. The type of urban local body depends on the population of the city/town:
| Above 10 Lakhs (10,00,000) | Municipal Corporation (also called 'Mahanagar Nigam') — the highest body. Examples: Chennai, Indore, Mumbai. |
| Between 1 Lakh and 10 Lakhs | Municipal Council (also called 'Nagar Palika') — the highest body. |
| Below 1 Lakh (Smaller populations) | Nagar Panchayat (also called 'City Council') — the highest body. This is a transitional body for areas moving from rural to urban. |
- Municipal Corporation / Mahanagar Nigam → Population > 10 lakhs
- Municipal Council / Nagar Palika → Population 1 to 10 lakhs
- Nagar Panchayat / City Council → Smaller populations (transitioning areas)
All these are collectively called 'Urban Local Bodies (ULBs)'.
- Municipal Corporation = Mahanagar Nigam
- Municipal Council = Nagar Palika
- Nagar Panchayat = City Council
How Urban Local Bodies Fund Their Activities
| Property Tax | Tax levied on property owners — a major revenue source for municipal bodies. |
| Water Charges | Fees charged for municipal water supply services. |
| Trade & Business Licenses | Fees for issuing hoardings, business, and trade licenses. |
| Paid CRM Services | Many on-request services (Water Tanker, Septic Tanker, Auditorium, Funeral Van, Mobile Toilet, Ambulance) are paid services. |
| Fines & Penalties | Fines for violations (illegal construction, sanitation violations, etc.). |
| State & Central Grants | Grants from State Government and Central Government schemes (e.g., Smart Cities Mission, AMRUT). |
Urban vs Rural Governance — Differences & Similarities
The chapter uses a dialogue between Sameer (village boy) and Anita (city girl) to illustrate the differences and similarities between urban and rural governance. Key points from this dialogue:
| Community Bonds | Rural: Everyone knows each other; community decisions made collectively; children can also get heard. Urban: People are more independent; often don't know neighbours; more anonymous. |
| Participation | Rural (Gram Sabha): More people can directly participate and discuss all issues of concern. Urban: More complex — governance is through elected representatives and ward committees. |
| Scale | Urban: Bigger and more complex than village Panchayat, but same idea — elected members represent citizens. |
| Community Spirit | Still exists in cities — e.g., after heavy rains and a house collapse, dozens of people gathered to help clear rubble and ensure no one was trapped. |
| Children's Participation | Rural example: Children noticed a dangerously low electricity wire, reported it to Gram Sabha member, and the issue was resolved. Democracy works when everyone's voice matters. |
| Core Idea | Both systems share the same fundamental idea: "Everyone's voice matters." |
| Similarities |
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| Differences |
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Key Takeaways — "Before We Move On"
- In urban areas, decentralised governance works through different urban local bodies, which fulfil various functions affecting the citizens' lives.
- As with the rural context, urban local bodies have elected members who represent the local citizens.
- The citizens also have duties to ensure that the local bodies are able to perform their functions efficiently.
End-Chapter Questions (Activities & Projects)
These questions are useful for mains-style answer writing practice:
| Q1 — Leaking Water Pipe | On your way to school, you notice a water pipe leaking. What would you do? Pointer: Report to ward committee / municipal corporation / CRM grievance portal; inform an adult; put a notice; this is participatory democracy in action. |
| Q2 — Invite ULB Member | Invite a member of an urban local body to class. Prepare questions on their role and responsibilities. Pointer: Questions about ward functions, citizen grievances, funding, election process, challenges. |
| Q3 — Family Expectations | Discuss with family/neighbours: what are their expectations from urban local bodies? Pointer: Clean roads, regular garbage collection, good water supply, no waterlogging, fast grievance redressal, transparent tax use. |
| Q4 — Good ULB Characteristics | Make a list of characteristics of a good urban local body. Pointer: Responsive to citizens, transparent, elected body, provides essential services, accountable, inclusive, financially sound. |
| Q5 — Similarities & Differences | Similarities and differences between Panchayati Raj and urban local bodies. Pointer: See Section 12 above for complete comparison. |
MCQ Practice — Chapter 12
40 Questions · Urban Local Government · UPSC / State PCS Standard


