000 01495pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b1996 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aSivanna, N.
245 _aDecentralised governance and planning in Karnataka: a historical review
260 _c1996
300 _ap.28-53
362 _aMar
520 _aWith the 73rd Constitutional Amendment, Panchayati Raj Institutions, or PRIs have acquired a statutory status as an integral part of our polity and have come to be recognised as institutions of self-government. This has given an impetus to decentralised governance and planning as strategies for the development of rural infrastructure and improvement of living conditions, especially of the weaker sections, so as to eradicate poverty, ill health, illiteracy, and other forms of backwardness. The experience of one State, Karnataka, viewed in a longer time frame, shows that local government bodies have had a chequered career and that, as a result of efforts by successive government regimes to rejuvenate, reinvigorate and change, panchayats here have, in significant measure, enjoyed that since qua non of decentralised government - political and financial autonomy. There is however a need for constitutional compulsion to make the States committed to devolving more powers, functions and resources so that panchayati raj might fulfill its mandate. - Reproduced
650 _aPanchayat - India - Karnataka
650 _aPanchayat
773 _aSocial Change
909 _a43028
999 _c43028
_d43028