| Relevance: GS-II Devolution of Powers to Local Levels; PESA & Tribal Rights | Source: MoPR / NIRD&PR National Study Report, 2026 |
1 · What exactly happened?
| A recent study by the Ministry of Panchayati Raj points out a sad reality: villagers are simply not showing up for Gram Sabha meetings. The researchers call this “Gram Sabha Participation Fatigue.” People are tired of attending meetings that don’t change anything in their daily lives.
This isn’t about laziness. The 73rd Amendment wanted the Gram Sabha to be a powerful, self-governing village body. But today, it has just become a rubber-stamp to approve government schemes. When villagers realise that the real decisions are made in big government offices and not under the village tree, they lose interest. |
2 · Why participation is falling
| What is a Gram Sabha? It is the village assembly made up of every registered voter in the village, defined under Article 243(b). Its powers are granted by the State Legislature under Article 243A. It is the only place in our system where ordinary citizens practice direct democracy. |
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The Dream
Meant to rule themselves
The idea was that villagers would plan, decide, and hold leaders accountable. In tribal areas (PESA), they even have a legal right to say ‘no’ to projects.
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The Reality
Clashing timings & rich control
Over 55% said meetings clash with farm or daily-wage work. Since attending doesn’t pay, the meetings are often hijacked by rich landlords or contractors who have free time.
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Voice Ignored
The bypass of tribal consent
In Scheduled Areas, local consent is often forced. The famous Hasdeo Arand protests in Chhattisgarh happened because mining decisions completely bypassed the Gram Sabha.
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The Solution
Give them real stakes
Give Panchayats more “free” funds to spend locally, compensate poor workers for attending, and make government officials answer to the village directly.
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- No financial freedom: Panchayats collect very little tax. The money they get from the Centre is strictly tied to specific schemes (like the Jal Jeevan Mission or Swachh Bharat). If the money is already locked for a specific purpose, villagers feel there is nothing left to debate.
- Technology as a headache: Uploading meeting details live on the Panchayat NIRNAY portal is great for government records. But it distracts officials from actually solving local problems. Sometimes, real MGNREGA wage demands are ignored by simply blaming “server errors.”
- The Legal Shield: The PESA Act, 1996 makes it absolutely mandatory to consult the Gram Sabha before acquiring land in Fifth Schedule tribal areas.
- Supreme Court Backing: The historic Samatha Judgment (1997) ruled that tribal land and mining leases cannot be handed over to non-tribals or private companies in Scheduled Areas.
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to the Gram Sabha and the PESA Act, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only
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