Introduction
Over the last two decades, Samaj Pragati Sahayog (SPS) has grown to be one of India’s largest grass-roots initiatives for water and livelihood security, working with its partners on a million acres of land across 72 of India’s most backward districts, mainly in the central Indian Adivasi belt. We take inspiration from the life and work of Baba Amte (our Pramukh Sahayogi) who rejected charity and successfully empowered even the most challenged. SPS is headquartered in a drought-prone, tribal area in the Dewas district of Madhya Pradesh, which typifies the most difficult problems of the country. We concentrate all our direct interventions in about 220 villages and towns of this area. This work is not so much a model
as a living laboratory of learning for others to adapt to their own areas. To facilitate this mutual learning, in 1998 we set
up the Baba Amte Centre for People’s Empowerment in tribal village Neemkheda, where our watershed work began in the early 1990s.
SPS believes that location-specific watershed development combined with low-cost, low-risk agriculture, other nature-based livelihoods and women-led microfinance, can dramatically raise rural incomes, providing an enduring panacea to India’s suicide-ridden drylands. This approach arrests distress migration towards the metros and liberates the rural poor from the clutches of usurious moneylender-traders. Our central mandate is the empowerment of India’s most disadvantaged people – women, Adivasis, Dalits and the poor, which we believe contributes to strengthening our fragile democracy at the grass-roots.
Watershed Development
SPS has taken up 45,000 acres for direct implementation of watershed programmes spread over 34 villages, spending Rs. 60 million.
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Agriculture
We have worked out a package of agricultural practices finely tuned to the resource endowments of the watershed, which is accessible to the poor and sustainable.
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SHG
We believe that the full potential of our watershed work can only be realised if it is supplemented by a microfinance programme.
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Kumbaya
We have trained over 500 women from 45 villages in ready-to-wear garments and patchwork products.
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NREGA
The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) promises the largest ever employment programme in
human history.
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Right to Food
A key area of governance reform in India needs to be the many schemes related to the Right to Food, such as the mid-day meal scheme, the ICDS and the Public Distribution System.
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Baba Amte Centre
Rather than directly expanding our own operations, we have opted to remain a lean, learning organisation that builds on partnerships.
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Resources and Publications
A selection of resource material on Watershed Development and NREGA.
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