What is Gramdan?
Historical Background
Key Points
12 points- 1.
Gramdan means the entire village land, or a significant portion of it, is voluntarily surrendered by individual owners to the village community. This is not just about giving a small piece of land, but about transforming the entire land ownership structure of the village into a collective one.
- 2.
For a village to be declared a Gramdan, a substantial majority of landowners, typically 80%, must agree to surrender their ownership rights. They also need to donate at least 5% of their land for redistribution to the landless within the village. This ensures broad community consensus and a commitment to equitable distribution.
- 3.
Once land is declared Gramdan, it is vested in the Gram Sabha or a Gramdan Committee a body representing the entire village community. This body then manages the land, allocates plots for cultivation, housing, and common purposes, and ensures that resources are used for the collective good.
- 4.
Visual Insights
Bhoodan vs. Gramdan: Key Distinctions
This table highlights the fundamental differences between the Bhoodan and Gramdan movements, crucial for understanding their distinct approaches to land reform.
| Feature | Bhoodan Movement | Gramdan Movement |
|---|---|---|
| Core Idea | Voluntary donation of individual land parcels | Voluntary surrender of entire village land ownership to community |
| Ownership | Land transferred to individual landless beneficiaries | Land vested in Gram Sabha/Village Community (collective ownership) |
| Scale | Individual donations, parcel by parcel | Whole village adoption, collective approach |
| Initiation Year | 1951 | 1952 (evolved from Bhoodan) |
| Beneficiary | Individual landless poor | Entire village community, especially landless as tenants of Gram Sabha |
| Land Alienation | Beneficiaries often had limited rights to sell/mortgage | Original owners become tenants, no right to sell/mortgage individually |
Recent Real-World Examples
1 examplesIllustrated in 1 real-world examples from Mar 2020 to Mar 2020
Source Topic
Telangana Demolitions Spark Row Over Bhoodan Land Rights
Polity & GovernanceUPSC Relevance
Frequently Asked Questions
121. What is the most crucial distinction between Bhoodan and Gramdan that UPSC often tests, and why is it a common trap?
The core distinction is the nature of land transfer and ownership. Bhoodan involved individual landowners donating a portion of their land to landless individuals. Gramdan, however, is a more radical concept where at least 80% of landowners in a village voluntarily surrender their land ownership rights to the entire village community (Gram Sabha), making the community the collective owner of all land. The trap lies in confusing Gramdan as merely a larger scale of Bhoodan; Gramdan fundamentally changes the ownership structure from private to collective, while Bhoodan maintains individual ownership.
Exam Tip
Remember: Bhoodan = 'Land Gift' (individual to individual), Gramdan = 'Village Gift' (individual to community, collective ownership). The 'dan' is different in scope and impact.
2. In Gramdan, what do the '80%' and '5%' figures signify, and how are they typically confused in MCQs?
The '80%' refers to the minimum percentage of landowners in a village who must agree to voluntarily surrender their ownership rights to the community for it to be declared a Gramdan village. The '5%' refers to the minimum percentage of their land that these landowners must donate for redistribution to the landless within the village. The common MCQ trap is to swap these percentages or confuse what each percentage represents – one is about the proportion of landowners, the other about the proportion of land donated for specific redistribution.
