Community Development Programme in India

dc.contributor.authorPlanning Commission
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-03T09:05:48Z
dc.date.available2026-03-03T09:05:48Z
dc.date.issued1955
dc.descriptionCommunity Projects Administration Government of India
dc.description.abstractThe Community Development Programme (CDP), launched in India in 1952, emerged as a comprehensive rural development initiative aimed at addressing the deep-rooted socio-economic challenges that persisted after independence in 1947, including poverty, illiteracy, disease, and inadequate infrastructure. Conceived within the broader framework of national planning under the First Five-Year Plan and guided by the vision of establishing a Welfare State, the programme sought to transform rural life through a people-centered and participatory approach. Initially implemented in 55 pilot project areas covering over 25,000 villages and approximately 16.4 million people, the CDP emphasized self-help, community mobilization, and the effective utilization of local human resources. Its multidimensional strategy encompassed agricultural advancement through improved seeds, irrigation, and land reclamation; health and sanitation improvements via rural latrines, health centers, and maternal services; educational expansion through new schools and adult literacy centers; and infrastructure development including roads and communication networks. A distinguishing feature of the programme was strong community participation, with villagers contributing nearly 60 percent of project costs through voluntary labor and financial support, thereby fostering ownership and accountability. International assistance, notably from the United States government and the Ford Foundation, supplemented domestic efforts by strengthening training and resource distribution systems. Despite notable achievements by mid-1955, a significant portion of the rural population remained outside the programme’s reach, necessitating expansion and strategic refinement in subsequent planning periods. Overall, the CDP represented a foundational step toward inclusive rural transformation, underscoring the essential interplay between governmental support and grassroots initiative in advancing India’s long-term socio-economic development and welfare objectives.
dc.identifier.citationPlanning Commission - 1955
dc.identifier.issn18658
dc.identifier.urihttp://10.21.131.211:4000/handle/123456789/6331
dc.identifier.urihttp://10.21.131.211:8080/eBook/18658/index.html
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherPlanning Commission
dc.relation.ispartofseriesC-6244
dc.subjectCommunity Development Programme
dc.subjectRural Development
dc.subjectWelfare State
dc.subjectFirst Five-Year Plan
dc.subjectPlanning Commission
dc.subjectGrassroots Participation
dc.subjectAgricultural Improvement
dc.subjectRural Health and Sanitation
dc.subjectAdult Education
dc.subjectInfrastructure Development
dc.subjectCommunity Contribution
dc.subjectRural Empowerment
dc.titleCommunity Development Programme in India
dc.title.alternativeCommunity Projects Administration Government of India
dc.typeReport

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