This publication considers the various stages through which this system evolved and also the promise it holds for the future.
The institution of Panchayati Raj is now recognised as an important mechanism for decentralizing power and ensuring people's participation in development activities. It received special emphasis after the 73rd Constitutional Amendment which made the transfer of power to the panchayats a part of the most basic document of this nation-The Constitution of India. We have come a long way. It is now about one and a half decades since the 73rd Constitutional Amendment came into effect. It is high time that we examined its historical evolution in its appropriate perspective and at the same time recognised and confronted directly the complexities and inherent paradoxes involved in materialising democratic decentralisation through Panchayati Raj. A large number of publications have appeared on the subject of Panchayati Raj during the last one and a half decades, but very few of these have been addressed to the elected representatives of Panchayats who are the ultimate engines of the process of democratic decentralisation. They need to know about its past, present and future.
It was also felt that an attempt should be made to locate photographs of those who contributed to the evolution of Panchayati Raj in India and those responsible for giving it its present shape. It was also realized that although a number of committees were constituted in the post- independence period to study its various aspects and to make reformative recommendations, the common people could not have access to the deliberations/reports of these committees.
In the context of India, particularly rural India, the Panchayats have been providing the institutional. mechanism for such democratic decentralization. It is a well known fact that Panchayats in one form or the other have existed in India since long. The literature on the subject reveals that even in medieval ages, in spite of radical political changes, one or the other form of village local-self government existed. During the British rule, we witnessed, the emergence of local-self government as a direct projection of the ruling elite. After independence, although the draft Constitution of India did not make any mention of Panchayats, a mention was added in the final draft under Article 40 in the chapter on Directive Principles of State Policy. It states, "The State should take steps to organise Village Panchayats and endow them with such powers and authority as may be necessary to enable them to function as units of self-government." This provision of the Constitution was primarily advisory and not taken seriously. Immediately after the independence the policy planners got engaged in experimenting with the Community Development Programme (CDP) for most of the 1950s. It was only in 1959, that the Panchayati Raj System came into existence in a formal way after the Study Team headed by Balwantrai Mehta expressed concern about the lack of popular participation in the Community Development Programme and made a strong plea for the devolution of power to lower levels through Panchayati Raj. The initial enthusiasm generated by this system, however, did not last long and it was subjected to rough weather wherever introduced. What followed in the subsequent decades were some sporadic and indifferent steps taken by some of the state governments to organise Panchayats, but they were invariably denied any meaningful powers and authority and, worst of all, the elections were seldom held at 5-year intervals as required. During the late 1970s the formation of the Asoka Mehta Committee as a possible way out to catalyze rural development through Panchayati Raj could not turn the tide.
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