People's Archive of Rural India


People's Archive of Rural India is a digital journalism platform in India. It was founded in December 2014 by veteran journalist, Palagummi Sainath, former rural affairs editor of The Hindu, author of the landmark book "Everybody Loves a Good Drought" and winner of numerous national and international awards. PARI focuses on rural journalism and publishes articles, videos and photo stories in numerous categories including Farming and its Crisis, Things We Do, Adivasis, Dalits and Resource Conflicts PARI's stories are translated in as many as thirteen Indian languages.PARI showcases the occupational, linguistic and cultural diversity of India and covers a countryside that the dominant media usually ignore.
At the Lawrence Dana Pinkham Memorial Lecture on May 3, 2016, N. Ram, Chairman of Kasturi & Sons Ltd, and former editor-in-chief and publisher of The Hindu cited PARI as "one of the brightest spots of public-spirited journalism”

Content

PARI is unique in its focus on and extensive documentation of rural Indian lives and livelihoods. Its coverage draws on the extensive work spanning more than three decades of founder-editor P. Sainath on the agrarian economy and current devastating agrarian and water crisis in rural India. PARI reporters include Jaideep Hardikar, Purusottam Thakur, Parth M. N., Aparna Karthikeyan, Arpita Chakrabarty and Anubha Bhonsle.
The content at People's Archive of Rural India is contributed by volunteers, students, journalists and by PARI fellows. PARI contributors have also included award-winning journalists like Madhusree Mukerjee, Priyanka Kakodkar, Shalini Singh and Chitrangada Choudhury.
The archive documents rapidly-disappearing languages like the Saimar language which had only 7 speakers left at the time of publication. This part of a larger project of documenting endangered languages. The "Resources" section of PARI contains curated and credible reports on rural India along with a focus and factoids that PARI's team of researchers produce.

Fellowships

Fellowships are awarded for work on specific regions in India. A PARI fellow spends significant time in fieldwork among the region's people and communities and reports on untold stories from the countryside.

Impact

The story on a post office of a village in Pithoragarh district, [Uttarakhand went viral on social media immediately on publishing. Within 4 days of the article being published, Pitthorgarh finally had its own post office.
Stories reported on PARI have been re-published by Economic & Political Weekly,, The Wire, Scroll.in, BBC Hindi, Times of India, Youth ki Awaaz, Saddhahaq.com, SunTV, and Mathrubhumi Weekly.

Awards

PARI stories have won numerous national and international awards including Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Award, The Statesman Award for Rural Reporting and the Lorenzo Natali Media Prize