State Politics and Panchayats in India
By- Buddhadeb Ghosh and Girish Kumar
Since independence several attempts were made to find
a space for the panchayati raj institutions (PRIs) in Indian polity. However,
barring Maharashtra, Gujarat and West Bengal, the PRIs could never survive
elsewhere in the country. This led to the necessity of constitutionalizing
panchayats in 1992, an attempt which also met with limited success.
Why were PRIs retained in certain states even without
a constitutional mandate? Conversely, why did others lag behind? These facts
draw attention to the question of ‘political will’. But what prompts certain
political regimes to adopt a pro-panchayat approach and others to oppose them,
even though all states are operating within the same democratic system?
In their quest to answer theses questions, the
authors have tried to look into the linkages between the panchayats and state
level politics. This, in turn, has enabled them to identify the political
factors that have so far determined the course of decentralization in this
country. Their findings are based on the case studies of four states, namely,
Maharashtra, Gujarat, West Bengal and Bihar. Apart from highlighting the
political variables whose presence or absence make or mar the prospects of
panchayats, this volume also raises serious questions about the capacity of the
present political system to provide genuine support to the project of
decentralization and local democracy.
Buddhadeb
Ghosh is a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Social Sciences, New Delhi.
Earlier, he served the Government of West Bengal in various capacities
including a stint as Director, State Institute of Panchayats.
Girish Kumar
is a Fellow in Political Science at the Centre de Sciences Humaines, New Delhi.
Earlier, he worked with the Institute of Social Sciences and also at the LBS
National Academy of Administration, Mussoorie.
ISBN
81-7304-487-2 2003 244p.
Rs.475/Pounds 40
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