GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Sanjit Roy

Sanjit Roy

Indian social activist, educator, and Barefoot College founder

IndiaBorn 1942founderBarefoot CollegeSocial Work and Research Centre
63
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

63/100

Raw Score

53/85

Confidence

62%

Evidence

Medium

About

Bunker Roy built Barefoot College around a village-first model that trained poor and often illiterate rural people, especially women, to solve local problems through solar power, water systems, health work, and practical education.

The public record supports a substantially positive profile in social care, dignity-centered development, and perseverance under pressure. The main limits are thinner evidence around personal worship discipline and some credible concerns about how fully the model's empowerment claims scale across markets and local accountability conditions.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview40%(10/25)
Contribution to Others80%(24/30)
Personal Discipline30%(3/10)
Reliability80%(4/5)
Stability Under Pressure80%(12/15)

Roy's score is carried by unusually strong, repeated public service to poor and excluded rural communities, solid institutional follow-through, and patient long-term commitment. The main drag is thinner evidence around belief and worship, plus some real limits in parts of the model.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god2/5

Moral seriousness is public; explicit theism is not.

Belief in accountability last day1/5

Little direct public evidence.

Belief in unseen order3/5

Gandhian moral order is visible.

Belief in revealed guidance2/5

Public guidance is more Gandhian than scriptural.

Belief in prophets as examples2/5

No strong public prophetic-model evidence.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives3/5

Community service supports families though family-specific proof is limited.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people4/5

Village programs support children and vulnerable youth.

Helps the poor or stuck5/5

This is the strongest repeated pattern.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people4/5

He focused on remote and cut-off communities.

Helps people who ask directly4/5

Programs respond to locally voiced needs.

Helps free people from constraint4/5

Women and poor villagers gain technical agency.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently1/5

No strong public evidence found.

Gives obligatory charity2/5

Institutional service is strong, personal giving evidence is thinner.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication4/5

Long-run consistency supports a high score.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty4/5

He sustained a low-cost model over time.

Patient during personal hardship4/5

The long duration suggests steadiness.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

He kept the mission through skepticism and hard conditions.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1967

Rural famine relief work redirects him away from an elite career

After responding to the 1967 famine in Bihar, Roy publicly traced his life direction to direct exposure to rural deprivation and moved toward long-term village work inspired by Gandhian ideals.

This became the moral turning point for his later development model and long-term rural commitment.

medium
1972

Founds the Social Work and Research Centre that became Barefoot College

Roy co-founded the institution in Tilonia to train rural communities in practical, village-owned solutions rather than expert-dependent development from cities.

A long-running institution was established around self-sufficiency, local ownership, and dignity for poor and low-literacy villagers.

high
1984

Begins solar rural electrification through Barefoot College

Barefoot College's solar work began in 1984 and was structured around training villagers to assemble, install, and maintain local energy systems themselves.

Solar electrification became one of the institution's signature delivery channels and a durable part of its anti-poverty model.

high
2005

Expands the Solar Mamas model across Africa

Barefoot College documented that since 2005 it had trained more than 140 mostly illiterate African grandmothers to fabricate, install, and maintain solar systems for remote villages.

The model widened from local Rajasthan work into cross-border women-led energy access and village maintenance systems.

high
2010

Named to the TIME 100 for grassroots anti-poverty work

TIME described Roy's work as a grassroots social entrepreneurship model that trained poor students for village-serving roles and fostered dignity and self-determination.

Roy's influence moved from respected NGO leadership into wider global visibility.

medium
2015

Publicly reiterates a village-first, anti-top-down development ethic

In a published commentary, Roy argued that poverty solutions should be based on local communities, practical knowledge, and production by the masses rather than urban expert-led models.

This reinforced a decades-long public commitment to community dignity and non-extractive development logic.

medium
2022

Independent research praises empowerment gains but notes practical limits

A peer-reviewed study found the Solar Mamas model supported transformative empowerment and clean-energy transition, while also noting challenges around rural market demand and affordability or design issues with some solar cookers.

The record remained positive overall, but later analysis complicated any simple narrative of frictionless scale.

medium

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

1967 famine response

1967

Roy encountered famine conditions and severe rural deprivation at a stage when he could have followed an elite urban path.

Response: He redirected his life toward long-term village service rather than returning to a comfort-first trajectory.

positive

Resistance from credential-focused development culture

2014

Roy openly described hostility from formally credentialed experts who rejected the idea that semi-literate women could master energy systems.

Response: He continued defending and scaling a low-cost, community-owned model instead of conceding the premise.

positive

Later scrutiny of product design and market limits

2022

Independent research noted real empowerment gains but also practical limits in affordability and some product design assumptions.

Response: The overall model remained intact, but the evidence counsels a more qualified reading of scale and universal transferability.

mixed

Progression

crisis years

The core model faced skepticism from expert culture and later research-based limits around some products and market uptake.

tested but intact

current stage

His legacy is now that of a durable grassroots founder whose influence survives through women-led solar and livelihood programs across many countries.

legacy consolidation

early years

Privileged education gave way to moral dislocation after direct exposure to famine and village poverty.

toward service

growth years

Institution building moved from Rajasthan village work into a replicable model of rural training, water, health, and solar delivery.

broadening impact

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Builds institutions that transfer practical agency rather than dependence.
  • Centers marginalized rural women in technically respected roles.
  • Uses public influence to defend dignity, self-reliance, and community ownership.

Concerns

  • Impact evidence often comes through the institution's own storytelling and reports.
  • Public record is weak on private worship and household-level obligations.
  • Some later evidence suggests implementation limits around affordability and market uptake.

Evidence Quality

5

Strong

3

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: medium

This profile measures public actions, commitments, patterns, and evidence quality. It does not judge hidden intention, private faith beyond available evidence, or ultimate spiritual standing.