Grassroots Democracy — Part 2
Local Government in Rural Areas
Big Questions & Key Statistics — India's Villages
- What are Panchayati Raj institutions?
- What are their functions?
- Why are they important in governance and democracy?
"The real India lives in its villages." — M.K. Gandhi
This sets the context: India's governance system must reach the village level to be truly democratic.
| Villages | About 600,000 villages |
| Towns | About 8,000 towns |
| Cities | Over 4,000 cities |
| Population | Has crossed 1.4 billion |
| Rural Population | Almost two-thirds of India's population lives in rural areas |
| Focus of Ch. 11 | Local government in rural areas (urban local government is covered in Chapter 12) |
Panchayati Raj System — Definition, Purpose & Three-Tier Structure
'Panchayat' refers to a village council. Panchayats bring governance closer to the people, making it possible for them to actively participate in decision-making processes. That is why the Panchayat system, also known as Panchayati Raj, is a form of self-government.
Panchayats play a vital role in addressing local issues, promoting development and ensuring that the benefits of government schemes reach the grassroots level.
| Village Level | Village Parishad / Gram Panchayat |
| Block Level | Block Panchayat / Panchayat Samiti / Mandal Parishad |
| District Level | District Panchayat / Zila Parishad |
- Works from bottom up — village → block → district
- Called a 'three-tier system'
- Together, these institutions' responsibilities cover almost all aspects of life in the district — from agriculture, housing, maintenance of roads, management of water resources, education, health care and social welfare to cultural activities.
- Structure and functions differ a little across States (States have authority over these institutions). But their objectives are the same — to enable villagers to take an active part in the management and development of their villages and local area.
Gram Panchayat — Gram Sabha, Sarpanch, Patwari & Panchayat Secretary
The Gram Panchayat is the base of the three-tier system — closest to the people in rural areas.
| Gram Sabha | A group of adults from a village (or group of neighbouring villages) who are enrolled as voters. In the Gram Sabha, women and men discuss all matters related to their area and take decisions. |
| Election of Members | Members of the Gram Panchayat are elected directly by the Gram Sabha. |
| Sarpanch / Pradhan | Each Gram Panchayat elects a head or president called the 'Sarpanch' or 'Pradhan'. In recent years, more and more women have become Sarpanchs. |
| Panchayat Secretary | The Gram Panchayat is assisted by a Panchayat Secretary who performs administrative functions such as calling meetings and maintaining records. |
| Patwari | Most Gram Panchayats are also assisted by an officer called 'Patwari' in many parts of India, who maintains the villagers' land records. In some cases, the Patwari keeps maps that are generations old! |
Exemplary Sarpanchs — Three Case Studies (Exam-Critical)
| Dnyaneshwar Kamble | Transgender Sarpanch | Tarangfal village, Solapur, Maharashtra | 2017 | Motto: lok seva, gram seva | Defeated 6 candidates |
| Vandana Bahadur Maida | First female Sarpanch | Bhil community | Khankhandvi, Madhya Pradesh | Addressed education & sanitation |
| Popatrao Baguji Pawar | Hiware Bazar, Ahmednagar, Maharashtra | Drought-to-green transformation | Anna Hazare's model | Rainwater harvesting, watershed, tree planting | Padma Shri 2020 |
Child-Friendly Panchayat Initiative
Panchayats are supposed to listen to everyone's voice — including the voice of children. The Child-Friendly Panchayat Initiative creates opportunities for children to express their ideas and opinions on matters that concern their wellbeing.
Steps are being taken in several States to encourage the participation of children in Bal Sabhas and Bal Panchayats on a regular basis, while village elders try to find solutions to their concerns.
| Maharashtra — Bal Panchayats | A few Bal Panchayats have worked to eliminate child labour and child marriage. They have brought many children back to school. Bal Panchayat members convince parents and adults to send children to school and not arrange marriages for girls who should be studying. |
| Sangkhu Radhu Khandu GP (Sikkim) | Sangkhu Radhu Khandu Gram Panchayat in west Sikkim has given a lot of importance to children's needs and rights. Built compound walls for schools to make them safer. Constructed kitchens in the schools for hygienically cooked midday meals. Declared a child-friendly Gram Panchayat for these efforts. |
Children's Parliament — Barefoot College, Rajasthan
The 'Children's Parliament', an offshoot of Bunker Roy's 'Barefoot College' initiative a few decades ago, empowered underprivileged children in Rajasthan's rural areas through education and democratic participation.
- Children aged 8 to 14 are engaged in governance processes
- Learning about democracy and social responsibility through night schools and parliament-like elections
- The 'Parliament' followed formal procedures, including voter ID cards and campaigning
- Elected representatives formed a 'Cabinet', overseeing school management and advocating for community needs
- Fostered leadership skills and social awareness
- Children addressed issues: access to education, sanitation and social equality
- The Children's Parliament initiative received the World's Children's Honorary Award in 2001
Panchayat Samiti (Block Level) & Zila Parishad (District Level)
| Panchayat Samiti (Block Level) | Also called Block Panchayat / Mandal Parishad (names vary by State). It is the link between the Gram Panchayat and the Zila Parishad. |
| Zila Parishad (District Level) | Also called District Panchayat. The highest tier of the Panchayati Raj system. |
| Membership | Members are elected by local people, but may also include Sarpanchs of villages in the area and local members of the State Legislative Assembly. |
| Composition | The composition of the Panchayat Samitis differs from State to State, but their role in strengthening local participation remains the same. |
| Key Role of Panchayat Samiti | Coordinates matters across Gram Panchayats — collects development plans from all Gram Panchayats and presents them at the District or State levels. This facilitates the allotment of funds for development projects and government schemes. |
Women's Reservation & Disadvantaged Sections
At all the three levels, special rules have been made so that disadvantaged sections of the population can make their needs and problems heard.
These institutions also have a provision for reserving one-third (1/3) of the seats for women.
Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana
The Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana is a government scheme that promotes the construction of all-weather roads in rural areas. Mentioned in NCERT as an example of a government scheme facilitated through the Panchayat Samiti's coordination of development plans across Gram Panchayats.
Arthaśhāstra — Kauṭilya's Administrative Structure
The Arthaśhāstra is an ancient text of governance written by Kauṭilya (later also known as Chāṇakya) some 2,300 years ago.
Among other things, it describes:
- How a state should be structured and run
- How the economy can be made prosperous
- What the duties of the ruler are
- How to conduct war
Kauṭilya, an expert in statecraft, also explains how a whole administrative structure should be put in place from the village to the regional capital.
| Sangrahaṇa | Sub-district headquarters — for every 10 villages |
| Kārvaṭika | District headquarters — for every 100 villages |
| Droṇamukha | (No specific modern equivalent given) — for every 400 villages |
| Sthānīya | Provincial headquarters — for every 800 villages |
| Significance | Shows that a similar multi-level administrative structure was thought of 2,300 years ago — an ancient precursor to modern Panchayati Raj. Author = Kauṭilya / Chāṇakya. |
Before We Move On — Chapter Summary
- The local government in rural areas is organised into a three-tier system.
- Democracy in the Panchayati Raj system works both through direct participation of people and through their elected representatives.
- The Panchayati Raj institutions give people in rural areas a measure of self-governance, so they may manage their issues and collaborate in development plans.
| Opening Quote | "The real India lives in its villages." — M.K. Gandhi |
| India's Villages | ~600,000 villages; 8,000 towns; 4,000+ cities; 1.4 billion population; 2/3 in rural areas |
| Panchayat | Village council; system of local government; also called Panchayati Raj; a form of self-government |
| Three Tiers | Village (Gram Panchayat) → Block (Panchayat Samiti) → District (Zila Parishad) |
| Gram Sabha | All adult voters of the village; elect Gram Panchayat members; discuss all local matters |
| Sarpanch / Pradhan | Head/president of Gram Panchayat — elected by Gram Sabha |
| Panchayat Secretary | Calls meetings, maintains records |
| Patwari | Maintains land records; keeps maps generations old |
| Dnyaneshwar Kamble | Transgender Sarpanch; Tarangfal, Solapur, Maharashtra; 2017; motto: lok seva, gram seva; defeated 6 candidates |
| Vandana Bahadur Maida | First female Sarpanch; Bhil community; Khankhandvi, MP; addressed education & sanitation |
| Popatrao Baguji Pawar | Hiware Bazar, Ahmednagar, Maharashtra; Anna Hazare's model; rainwater harvesting; green village; Padma Shri 2020 |
| Bal Sabha / Bal Panchayat | Children's participation in governance; several States implementing |
| Children's Parliament | Bunker Roy's Barefoot College, Rajasthan; children aged 8–14; World's Children's Honorary Award 2001 |
| Women's Reservation | One-third (1/3) of seats reserved for women at all three levels |
| PMGSY | Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana — all-weather roads in rural areas |
| Arthaśhāstra | Written by Kauṭilya (also Chāṇakya); 2,300 years ago; describes state structure, economy, ruler's duties, war; 4-level admin: 10/100/400/800 villages |
| Panchayat Samiti Role | Link between Gram Panchayat and Zila Parishad; coordinates development plans; facilitates fund allotment |
NCERT Exercise Q&A
| Q1: Three tiers of Panchayati Raj and their key functions | Village level (Gram Panchayat): Closest to people; elected by Gram Sabha; manages local issues — water, roads, schools, land disputes; head = Sarpanch/Pradhan. Block level (Panchayat Samiti): Link between village and district; coordinates development plans across Gram Panchayats; facilitates fund allotment. District level (Zila Parishad): Highest tier; oversees development across the district; ensures State-level plans reach villages. |
| Q2: Write a letter to the Sarpanch about plastic bags on roadside | Key elements: Address the Sarpanch; describe the problem (plastic bags on roadside causing health/environment hazard); request action (organise collection drives, awareness programs, ban on plastic, place dustbins); appeal to their duty of maintaining the village. |
| Q4: Village school near highway — which Panchayati Raj institution can help? | The Gram Panchayat can address the immediate issue — install speed breakers, request a zebra crossing, or write to higher authorities. The Panchayat Samiti can escalate the matter to the block level for road safety measures. If it involves a State highway, the Zila Parishad can coordinate with State authorities. |
MCQ Practice Set — Chapter 11: Local Government in Rural Areas
50 Questions covering all definitions, tiers, Sarpanchs, Arthaśhāstra, awards & more | UPSC & State PCS
Prepared by Legacy IAS, Bangalore · UPSC & State PCS Coaching
Source: NCERT Class VI — Exploring Society: India and Beyond, Chapter 11 (Reprint 2026-27) © NCERT
For educational purposes only. All chapter content credit to NCERT.


