Goa CM Sawant Inaugurates Mediation Awareness Programme in Panaji
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Goa announced on Wednesday, 24 June 2026 that Chief Minister Dr. Pramod Sawant inaugurated a Mediation Awareness Programme for Grass-root Level Administration at Sanskruti Bhavan, Patto, Panaji, organised by Jansaathi - Centre for Dispute Resolution at V. M. Salgaocar College of Law.
Context
The programme was held at Sanskruti Bhavan, a government venue in the state capital regularly used for official training and policy launches. It was organised by Jansaathi, a dedicated centre for mediation training and alternative dispute resolution housed within V. M. Salgaocar College of Law, one of Goa's long-established legal education institutions. The event specifically targeted administrators working at the grass-root level — including panchayat and municipal officials — who are often the first point of contact for community disputes.
Policy Backdrop
The programme aligns with a broader national push following the enactment of the Mediation Act, 2023, which institutionalised mediation as a statutory mechanism for resolving civil and commercial disputes outside the formal court system. Since 2023, both central and state governments have rolled out awareness drives aimed at reducing pendency in district courts by equipping local administrators with alternative dispute resolution skills. Goa's initiative follows this pattern of embedding mediation capabilities within routine administrative training at the sub-district level.
Dr. Pramod Sawant, who has served as Chief Minister since 2019, has overseen multiple legal awareness and administrative capacity-building programmes during his tenure. Bringing the mediation awareness drive to grass-root administrators signals an intent to move dispute resolution closer to communities rather than relying solely on courts.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of the programme are grass-root level administrators — officials at panchayats, local bodies, and municipal offices across Goa — who handle land, neighbourhood, and civic disputes on a daily basis. Equipping them with mediation awareness can help resolve conflicts at the community level before they escalate into prolonged court cases. V. M. Salgaocar College of Law and its Jansaathi centre serve as the academic and operational backbone of the training, lending institutional credibility to the programme.
For ordinary citizens, particularly in rural Goa, access to trained mediators at the panchayat level could translate into faster, less expensive resolution of everyday disputes — from property boundaries to water access — without requiring legal representation.
What's Next
Observers will watch whether Goa formalises this training module into a statewide curriculum and whether it is formally linked to the Goa State Legal Services Authority or the pending rules under the Mediation Act, 2023. A structured rollout across all talukas would mark a significant step in the state's alternative dispute resolution architecture. The involvement of an academic institution like V. M. Salgaocar College of Law opens the possibility of certifying trained administrators and creating a replicable model for other small states.