Kurukshetra A Symposium on Community Development in India (1952-1955)

dc.contributor.authorPlanning Commission
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-24T11:35:34Z
dc.date.available2026-02-24T11:35:34Z
dc.date.issued1955
dc.descriptionIssued by Publications Division on behalf of The Community Projects Administration
dc.description.abstractThe Community Development Programme (CDP), launched in post-independence India on October 2, 1952, under the leadership of figures such as Jawaharlal Nehru and inspired by the ideals of Mahatma Gandhi, marked a transformative shift from a centralized administrative model to a participatory framework rooted in aided self-help and grassroots empowerment. Conceived to address the pressing needs of rural India—where the overwhelming majority of the population resided—the programme emphasized integrated development encompassing agriculture, education, health, sanitation, housing, and local governance through revitalized Panchayats and trained Gram Sevaks. Through mechanisms such as the National Extension Service, cooperative societies, leadership camps, and block-level administration, the initiative sought to harmonize government support with community initiative, fostering ownership, self-reliance, and collective responsibility among villagers. Notable experiments, including cooperative brick-kiln industries and village-level agricultural improvements, demonstrated the potential of decentralized planning, voluntary labor, and local resource mobilization to generate both economic growth and social transformation. Despite early achievements in infrastructure creation, agricultural productivity, and community mobilization, evaluations highlighted persistent challenges such as inadequate training of personnel, bureaucratic rigidity, uneven financial expenditure, limited inclusion of women and landless laborers, and the need for deeper ideological clarity in leadership. Ultimately, the programme underscored that sustainable rural development depends not merely on physical targets but on nurturing motivation, cooperative action, responsive leadership, and a renewed community spirit—thereby laying the foundation for a long-term vision of equitable and participatory nation-building in rural India.
dc.identifier.citationPlanning Commission - 1955
dc.identifier.issn21574
dc.identifier.urihttp://10.21.131.211:4000/handle/123456789/6264
dc.identifier.urihttp://10.21.131.211:8080/eBook/21574/index.html
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherPlanning Commission
dc.relation.ispartofseriesC-6213
dc.subjectCommunity Development Programme
dc.subjectRural Development
dc.subjectSelf-Help Philosophy
dc.subjectPanchayati Raj
dc.subjectGram Sevaks
dc.subjectCooperative Societies
dc.subjectAgricultural Modernization
dc.subjectLeadership Transformation
dc.subjectNational Extension Service
dc.subjectWomen’s Empowerment
dc.subjectVillage Infrastructure
dc.subjectParticipatory Planning
dc.titleKurukshetra A Symposium on Community Development in India (1952-1955)
dc.title.alternativeIssued by Publications Division on behalf of The Community Projects Administration
dc.typeReport

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Kurukshetra_A_Symposium_Community_Development_India_19521955.pdf
Size:
28.95 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

Collections