Bhoomi (software)

Indian government project


title: "Bhoomi (software)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["government-of-karnataka", "land-management-in-india", "e-government-in-india"] description: "Indian government project" topic_path: "geography/india" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhoomi_(software)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Indian government project ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox website"]

FieldValue
nameBhoomi
logoBhoomi (software) logo.png
logocaptionBhoomi logo
collapsibleyes
collapsetextScreenshot
captionThe land records management software
url
commercialNo
typeGovernment Site
registrationnone
languageEnglish and Kannada
content_licenseFree Documentation License
ownerRevenue department, Government of Karnataka
authorNational Informatics Centre, Karnataka
launch_date
current_statusOnline
::

| name = Bhoomi | logo = Bhoomi (software) logo.png | logo_size = | logocaption = Bhoomi logo | screenshot = | collapsible = yes | collapsetext = Screenshot | caption = The land records management software | url = | commercial = No | type = Government Site | registration = none | language = English and Kannada | content_license = Free Documentation License | owner = Revenue department, Government of Karnataka | author = National Informatics Centre, Karnataka | launch_date = | revenue = | current_status = Online | footnotes =

Bhoomi is a project jointly funded by the Government of India and the Government of Karnataka to digitize the paper land records and create a software mechanism to control changes to the land registry in Karnataka. The project was designed to eliminate the long-standing problem of inefficiency and corruption in the maintenance of land records at dispersed and poorly supervised and audited block-level offices known as "taluka" offices in South India and "tehsildar" offices in North India. The project development and implementation was done by National Informatics Centre.

Many experiments with computerization have failed due to corruption and other factors.

::quote Implementation of Land record computerization has been difficult in India. Bhoomi succeeded because there was a champion who worked a 15-hour day for over 12 months, devoting 80% of his time to the project. Minimizing resistance from staff by harnessing political support was an important contributory factor. Extensive training coupled with a participatory style also helped to diminish resistance." ::

Background

The idea to computerize land records was first mooted by Chief Minister of Karnataka S. M. Krishna in 1999. In his 2000–01 budget speech, he stated: "I am making a solemn commitment in this House that by March 31, 2001, RTCs in computerised format will be made available to every single farmer in the State." In his next budget speech, he said that RTCs were "available at kiosks in 40 taluks across the State. In a few months the remaining 125 taluks will be able to get RTCs." It was reported in 2004 that the Bhoomi project included demographic and economic data and legal rights, and that it also had 47 information fields on owner, tenant, crops, yield, irrigation sources, mortgage details, nature of soil and bank loans.

References

References

  1. Subhash Bhatnagar. "Transparency and Corruption: Does E-Government Help?".
  2. Swati Prasad. (2008). "'Corruption' slowing India's e-govt growth". ZDNet Asia.
  3. Rajeev Chawla, Additional Secretary Department of Revenue. (2001). "Bhoomi: Online Delivery of Land Titles in Karnataka, India". World Bank.
  4. (16 February 2004). "`Bhoomi' makes land records secure". The Hindu.

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