Overview
This draft is a cautious starting point for an IndiaWiki editorial entry on Indira Gandhi Krishi Vishwavidyalaya, Raipur, an institution within the higher education cohort of Indian universities specialising in agricultural sciences and allied disciplines. The name of the university indicates a focus on Krishi (agriculture) and a location associated with Raipur, the capital city of the state of Chhattisgarh. As a state agricultural university, it would typically fall within the broader framework of agricultural higher education and research in India, which is co-ordinated at the national level by apex bodies dedicated to agricultural research and education. However, this draft deliberately refrains from asserting any specific year of establishment, founding legislation, governance composition, affiliated colleges, recognised programmes, faculty strength, student numbers, campus size, or research output, since none of these can be verified from the title and cohort alone. Editors taking this draft forward are expected to substitute every general statement below with sourced, attributable facts, and to remove or rewrite any sentence that cannot be supported by reliable, citable references. The intention here is to provide a structural scaffold and contextual framing rather than a finished encyclopaedic article ready for publication.
Background
State agricultural universities in India have historically been established to address region-specific challenges in farming, horticulture, animal husbandry, fisheries, forestry, agricultural engineering, and rural development. They typically combine teaching, research and extension functions, often operating across multiple campuses or through a network of constituent and affiliated colleges, regional research stations and Krishi Vigyan Kendras. The naming of an institution after Indira Gandhi, a former Prime Minister of India, is a pattern observed in several Indian public institutions; however, editors should independently verify the basis on which this particular university came to bear that name and avoid assuming any biographical or political linkage beyond what reliable sources confirm.
Raipur is situated in the central Indian region historically associated with diverse agro-climatic zones, including rice cultivation, pulses, oilseeds and minor forest produce. A university operating from this region would plausibly engage with such cropping systems, but the specific mandate, jurisdiction and zonal coverage of Indira Gandhi Krishi Vishwavidyalaya must be confirmed by editors with reference to its founding statute, official charter, annual reports, or notifications by the relevant state government and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research. No such specifics are asserted in this draft.
Significance
An agricultural university based in Raipur would generally be of interest to readers because of the broader importance of agriculture to the economy and society of central India. Such institutions tend to play roles in human resource development for the agricultural sector, in technology generation through varietal development and farm mechanisation research, and in extension activities that connect laboratory findings with field-level adoption by farmers. They may also contribute to policy inputs at the state level on issues such as soil health, irrigation, climate-resilient agriculture, livestock improvement and post-harvest management.
However, the precise contributions, flagship programmes, signature research outputs, notable released crop varieties, patents, collaborations with national and international bodies, and impact assessments associated with Indira Gandhi Krishi Vishwavidyalaya are not asserted in this draft. Editors are encouraged to identify and cite specific, verifiable achievements rather than rely on generic statements about the importance of agricultural universities. Where significance is described in the final article, it should be tied to concrete, sourced examples and proportionate to what is documented in independent secondary literature, government publications and peer-reviewed work, rather than promotional material.
Common topics for editors to verify
The following list identifies areas commonly covered in articles about Indian agricultural universities. Each item below should be independently verified before inclusion, and unverifiable points should either be omitted or marked clearly as pending citation.
- Exact legal name, any earlier names, and the official statute or Act under which the university was constituted.
- Year and circumstances of establishment, including any predecessor institutions or colleges that were merged into it.
- Jurisdiction of the university within Chhattisgarh, including the districts and agro-climatic zones it serves.
- Governance structure, including the offices of Chancellor, Vice-Chancellor, Board of Management, Academic Council and other statutory bodies, without naming current incumbents unless reliably sourced.
- List of constituent colleges, faculties, schools and departments, along with locations of campuses and regional stations.
- Programmes offered at undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral levels, and the disciplines covered.
- Accreditation and recognition status, including relationships with the University Grants Commission, the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, and any national accreditation bodies.
- Research mandate, including thrust areas, all-India co-ordinated research projects hosted, and notable releases of crop varieties or technologies.
- Extension activities, including Krishi Vigyan Kendras under its administrative control and farmer outreach programmes.
- Library, laboratory, farm and other infrastructure, with dates and capacities only where sourced.
- Publications, journals or technical bulletins issued by the university.
- Notable alumni and faculty, included only where supported by independent reliable sources.
- Memoranda of understanding and collaborations with other universities, research institutes and industry partners.
- Any controversies, audits or reviews, included only with strict adherence to neutrality and sourcing standards.
Editors should be especially careful with numerical claims such as student enrolment, faculty count, number of varieties released, ranking positions, budget figures and land area, since these change over time and are easy to misstate.
Suggested structure for the final article
For consistency with other IndiaWiki entries on agricultural universities, the following structure is suggested for the final published article. The lead section should provide a concise summary of the institution's identity, location, type and broad mandate, written in neutral tone and supported by inline citations. A History section should trace the origins, establishment, key reorganisations and major milestones, with each claim sourced.
A Campus and infrastructure section can describe the main campus and any sub-campuses, instructional farms, laboratories and library facilities. An Academics section should cover faculties, colleges, departments, programmes and admission processes, distinguishing between undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral offerings. A Research section should outline thrust areas, projects, notable releases and publications. An Extension section should describe outreach to farmers, including any Krishi Vigyan Kendras under the university.
Additional sections may include Governance, Affiliations and recognition, Notable people, and See also. A References section using inline citations to reliable sources is essential, supplemented by an External links section pointing to the official website and other authoritative pages. Throughout, editors should maintain neutral point of view, avoid promotional phrasing, and ensure that every non-trivial claim is verifiable. Images, infoboxes and tables should be added only when their content can be sourced and kept current.
Editorial notes
This draft has been prepared deliberately without specific facts because the prompt restricts content to what can be inferred from the title and cohort alone. Reviewing editors should treat the entire draft as scaffolding rather than as a body of verified content. Before publication, every paragraph must be either rewritten with sourced material or removed. Editors are advised to consult primary sources such as the official website of the university, gazette notifications of the Government of Chhattisgarh, annual reports, and recognised secondary sources including reputable news organisations and peer-reviewed academic literature.
Care should be taken to avoid copying text from official or promotional materials; paraphrasing in neutral language is preferred. Claims about individuals, especially living persons such as office-bearers and alumni, must comply with biographies-of-living-persons style cautions and require strong sourcing. Statistical claims should carry the date of measurement and the source. If reliable sources are not available for a particular section, it is preferable to leave that section short or omit it entirely rather than fill it with speculation. This editorial draft itself should not be published in its present form.
References
No references are cited in this draft, as no specific factual claims have been made. Reviewing editors are expected to add inline citations to reliable, independent and verifiable sources for every substantive statement in the final article, and to compile a complete reference list before the entry is moved to the main space.