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Yes and no: Governments must respect the decision-making of gram sabhas (The Hindu)

Paper: GS – II, Subject: Polity, Topic: Local Government, Issue: Gram Sabhas and Grass-roots Democracy.

Context:

Recently, a report based on surveys of the Ministry of Rural Development highlighted declining participation in gram sabhas. It described the problem as a lack of “vibrancy”, but also showed that people often avoid meetings because decisions produce few results, attendance affects their livelihoods, and local bodies have limited real power.

Key Takeaways:

Explanation:

Grama Sabha & Panchayati Raj - Background

Why Participation Is Falling?

  • Many villagers avoid meetings because previous discussions did not produce visible results.
  • Poor workers may lose wages by attending, while landlords and contractors can participate more easily.
  • This creates participation fatigue, where people lose interest in repeated meetings that bring little change.
  • Gram sabhas may therefore become a playground for the leisured elite, dominated by people with greater time, money and influence.

Limits of Digital Solutions:

  • The NIRNAY App helps schedule meetings, record decisions and upload minutes.
  • Digital records can improve transparency, but excessive data entry may reduce the time available for public discussion.
  • Technology cannot increase participation unless citizens have real influence over decisions.

Weak Decision-Making and Financial Powers:

  • Gram sabhas are often treated as clearinghouses meaning they often merely approve, record or distribute centrally and State-designed programmes.
  • True “vibrancy” means active debate, broad participation and visible implementation, not merely more meetings or uploaded records.
  • Panchayats have limited taxation powers and remain dependent on grants tied to schemes such as the Jal Jeevan Mission and Swachh Bharat Mission.
  • People may lose interest when locally identified needs cannot receive funds.

Rights in Scheduled Areas:

  • Under Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (PESA), gram sabhas participate in decisions involving land acquisition, mining and forests.
  • Governments may sometimes bypass them or use low attendance to claim approval.
  • Genuine consent must include the right to say both “yes” and “no”.

Way Forward:

  • Gram sabhas should receive real authority over local planning and spending.
  • Participation by poor workers should be supported so that attending meetings does not cause wage loss.
  • Digital tools should assist public discussion rather than increase paperwork.
  • Governments must respect gram sabha decisions, including their right to reject projects.

Conclusion:

Gram sabhas cannot be strengthened only through more meetings or digital reporting. They need financial power, inclusive participation and respect for local decisions. This is essential for meaningful grass-roots democracy.

Source: (The The Hindu)

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