Tribal Development Policy in India: Harsh Mander
Tribal Development Policy in India: Harsh Mander
Tribal Development Policy in India: Harsh Mander
PAPER
Harsh Mander
Constituting about eight per cent of the total population of India, the tribal peoples are among the most
vulnerable groups in the country. Not only do they share with other disadvantaged groups the common
travails of economic deprivation, they also face perennially grave threats to their cultural integrity and
socio-political freedoms. This paper will try to summarise the legislative and public policy interventions
of the Indian state in relation to its tribal populations.
TRIBES IN INDIA
A considerable part of the ethnographic literature on tribes in India is preoccupied with the definition of
a tribe, and the relevance of this definition to the Indian situation. Loosely, a tribe is a ‘social group the
members of which live in a common territory, have a common dialect, uniform social organisation and
possess cultural homogeneity, having a common ancestor, and shared systems of political organisation
and religious pattern’ (Chaudhuri 1990: vi). As is evident, this definition does not take us very far as it
could be applicable to many types of communities.1 Given the wide-ranging debate in anthropological
circles over the very notion of a tribe as well as the tremendous diversity across tribal communities,
however, it would be sufficient for our purposes to use the self-definition adopted by the Indian Council
of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples (ICITP) in a 1992 symposium: ‘peoples whose political and social
organisation [is] based primarily on moral binding among kins, real and putative, who [have] a custodial
attitude towards nature and [are] outside the Jati (caste) Varna system’ (Roy Burman 2000: 73). This is
a characterisation that emphasises the tribal persons’ ‘extension of self not only to kins’ but also to their
community including ‘the endowments of nature in the territories with which they have a special
association through life cycle events and through activities related to the life support system’. Thus, this
relationship with the human and natural environment2 is a defining feature.
As against this self-characterisation, the relevant administrative category for purposes of policy is the
Scheduled Tribe. According to the definition given by Article 342 of the ‘Constitution of India, the
Scheduled Tribes are the tribes or tribal communities or part of or groups within tribes and tribal
communities which have been declared as such by the President by the public notification’3
(Government of India 1998-99: 31).
1
And indeed, such confusion was widespread during the early years of British rule when all of India’s
2
This is roughly what Savyasaachi (1998: 27) describes as the tribals’ ‘forest universe’. Savyasaachi goes on
stress the importance of the unique tribal work culture as opposed to the industrial work ethic as a source of
identity for tribal communities.
3
For a detailed transcription of and commentary on the Constituent Assembly debates on the Fifth and Sixth
Schedules, see Savyasaachi (1998).
2 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
Further, certain areas were declared as 'Scheduled' under the Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the
Constitution and subjected to special administrative arrangements for the protection of tribal
communities. The criteria for declaring any territory as 'Scheduled' adopted by the sub-committee of the
Constituent Assembly included: (1) preponderance of tribal population; (2) the stage of advancement
and degree of assimilation; and (3) to a slightly lesser extent, the susceptibility of these areas to special
administrative treatment. A somewhat modified basis was, however, recommended by the Commission
for Scheduled Areas and Scheduled Tribes, 1960 (also known as the Dhebar Commission) emphasising
preponderance of tribals in the population (50 per cent), compactness and reasonable size,
underdeveloped nature of the area and marked disparity in economic standards of the people. However,
nowhere in the Constitution have ‘tribes’ been defined, and therefore the updating of lists of
Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Areas has been an on-going administrative exercise since 1950.
In the Sixth Schedule Tribal Areas in the States of Assam, Meghalaya and the Union Territory of
Mizoram, Autonomous District Councils and Regional Councils were constituted with powers to make
laws for management of land, forest, shifting cultivation, appointment or succession of chiefs or
headpersons, inheritance of property, marriage and divorce, social customs and any matter relating to
village or town administration. The Fifth Schedule was initially made applicable only to the states of
Madras, Bombay, West Bengal, Bihar, Central Provinces and Berar, United Provinces and Orissa.
It was in 1976 that the Fifth Schedule was extended to cover tribes living in the states of Madhya
Pradesh, Bihar, Orissa, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Himachal Pradesh (Sharma 1995).
However, administrative laxity and parochial political considerations have continued to dominate, as
in parts of Andhra Pradesh, and in West Bengal, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu, many regions of
tribal concentration are still not scheduled.
The 2001 Census enumerated the total population of the country as more than 1 billion, out of which
the population of Scheduled Tribes was 84.3 million, constituting 8.2 per cent of the total. India is by
this count, home to more tribal people than any country in the world, exceeded only by the continent
of Africa taken as a whole. However, there are many claims that several ethnic communities should
qualify as Scheduled Tribes (STs), but have not been officially recognised. The Indian Constitution
recognises 461 ethnic groups as STs, but according to one estimate, the figure could be as high as
6354.
This is a significant number in absolute terms, but certain other aspects of tribal populations in India
are equally noteworthy. Tribal communities are dispersed in most parts of India, except in the states
of Haryana, Jammu and Kashmir, and Punjab, and the Union territories of Chandigarh, Delhi and
Pondicherry. Chaudhuri (1990) identifies six major regions of tribal concentration, as follows:
1. North-eastern region: In the mountain valleys and other areas of north-eastern India,
covering the States and Union Territories like Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur,
4
See Sille Stilden et al (ed.) (2006).
WORKING PAPER 3
Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland and Tripura live tribes like the Abor, Garo, Khasi, Kuki,
Mismi, Naga, etc.
2. Himalayan region: In the sub-Himalayan regions covering parts of North-Bengal, Uttar
Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh live tribes like Lepcha, Rabha, etc., mostly belonging to
Mongolian racial group.
3. Central India region: In the older hills and Chotanagpur Plateau, along the dividing lines
between peninsular India and the Indo-Gangetic basin, live many tribal communities like
the Bhumij, Gond, Ho, Oraon, Munda, Santal, etc., covering the States of Bihar, Orissa,
Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal and mostly belonging to Proto-Australoid racial stock.
4. Western India region: Covering the States like Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa,
Dadra and Nagar Haveli live a number of tribal communities, the most important of them
being the Bhil, racially belonging to the Proto-Australoid group.
5. Southern India region: Covering the States of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu
and Kerala, in the Nilgiri Hills and converging lines of the Ghats live the Chenchu, Irula,
Kadar, Kota, Kurumba, Toda, etc., having Negrito, Caucasoid, Proto-Australoid or mixed
physical features.
6. Island region: Covering Andaman, Nicobar and Lakshadweep Islands live a number of
small tribes like the Andamanese, Onge, Sentinelese, etc.
(Chaudhuri 1990: viii, x)
However, Shah et al (1998) underline the importance of the fact that ‘in most areas of tribal
concentration, except the North-East, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Lakshadweep, tribal people
constitute a minority of the population of the region’ (Shah et al 1998: 142). Further, ninety-two per
cent live in states/Union Territories where they form less than 25 per cent of the population (Shah et
al 1998: 144). In all ten states with the highest absolute numbers of tribal people, tribals are
consistently in a minority. This has serious repercussions for their political bargaining power.
The sheer diversity of Scheduled Tribes is another barrier to their political mobilisation. According to
the 1981 census, there are more than 700 tribes in India. Numerically, the three largest tribes are the
Gonds, Bhils and Santals, with population ranging from 3 to 5 million each. Other large tribes are the
Oraons, Meenas, Mundas, Khonds, Bodos, Kolis and Hos. At the other end of the spectrum are tribes
like the Great Andamanese, which comprise less than 50 individuals.
continues to be substantially higher than national average. The figures for 1993-94 and 1999-2000
provide an illustration of this gap, and also show that poverty is declining at a slower pace among
tribal population than the rest of the country.
The poverty status of tribal populations reflects in their low food security status, with worrying levels of
hunger as shown by a few large sample surveys conducted in recent times. A study by the Centre for
Environment and Food Security (2005) found that out of a total of 1000 sample tribal households from
40 sample villages in Rajasthan and Jharkhand surveyed for this study, a staggering 99 per cent were
facing chronic hunger. The data gathered during this survey suggests that 25.2 per cent of surveyed
tribal households had faced semi-starvation during the previous week of the survey. This survey found
that 24.1 per cent of the surveyed tribal households had lived in semi-starvation condition throughout the
previous month of the survey. Over 99 per cent of the tribal households had lived with one or another
level of endemic hunger and food insecurity during the whole previous year. Moreover, out of 500
sample tribal households surveyed in Rajasthan, not a single one had secured two square meals for the
whole previous year.
Similarly a diet and nutrition survey of the tribal populations living in the Integrated Tribal
Development project (ITDP) areas, in the States of Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh,
Maharashtra, Gujarat, Orissa and West Bengal was done during 1985-87. A repeat survey was carried
out during 1998-99 among tribal population living in the same ITDP areas and also in Madhya
Pradesh to assess time trends in food and nutrient intake, nutritional status as assessed by
anthropometric indices of nutritional status and prevalence of nutritional deficiency signs.
A comparison of data between the two surveys in tribal population showed that over time there has
not been any improvement in the food and nutrient intake, but actually a steady decline. The tribal
population is more under nourished and chronically hungry than their rural counterparts.
WORKING PAPER 5
Similarly, health indices among tribal children also reflect lower health status that rest of the social
groups. The table below shows that infant mortality rate, under-5 children mortality and percentage of
children under-weight are higher in tribal population than overall population.
The health vulnerabilities within the tribal groups further depends on gender and poverty status and is
more severe in primitive tribal groups. The figure below points out the under weight situation of girl
child, which becomes worse when a girl child belong to the tribal population and further worsens when
the tribal girl child belongs to the poorest categories.
6 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
Figure 1
How the probability of being underweight increases for girls in increasingly vulnerable
positions
Soure: Adapted from Kiran, Usha (2005), Presentation on ICDS, Advisors Workshop, Office
of Supreme Court Commissioner, New Delhi
Further, a higher proportion of the Scheduled Tribe population (32.69 per cent) engaged in
agricultural wage labour as compared to the general population (25.74 per cent), indicating the
livelihood vulnerability of tribal peoples and the problems caused by land deprivation (described
below) and dependence on marginal, low-productivity land.
Tribal people also suffer deprivation with regard to a crucial source of human capital — education.
For example, in 2001, as against the national average of 64.80 per cent, the literacy rate of Scheduled
Tribes was around 47.10 per cent. More strikingly, around 65 per cent of Scheduled Tribe women are
illiterate. Though the disparity in literacy rates as well as enrolment rates have declined over years,
with improvements in gross enrolment ratio (class I-V), the gap continues to be substantial in these
indicators, as shown in Table 4 and Table 5:
WORKING PAPER 7
Table 4: Literacy rate of STs and General Population in 1991 and 2001 Censuses
Table 5: Gross Enrolment ration among children in STs and General Population.
Levels/ Year General population Scheduled Tribes
Total Girls Total Girls
I- V (6-11 Yrs) 95.4 93.1 98.7 92.3
VI-VIII (11-14 Yrs) 61.0 56.2 48.2 40.8
Source: Ministry of HRD, Selected Educational Statistics, 2002-03
Persistence of high poverty, chronic hunger, low health and education status is a cumulative outcome of
this chain of exploitative factors, in the cycle that produces and reproduces the pauperisation of tribal
communities. Whereas chronic indebtedness causes alienation of tribal communities from their
entitlements (land, forests, minerals, water) and pushes them further into debt bondage or distress
migration, the policy regime forces them to be displaced from their native dwellings for projects or as
forest encroachers. In addition, the agricultural policies of the State that aim at rapid production
enhancement have resulted in shifts from traditional agricultural practices, leading to enormous erosion
of the survival strategies of tribal people, with consequent devastation in fragile tribal economies. A
small shift in local agro-climatic conditions impacts in a total damage of the crop, and in the absence of
fallback livelihood means like forests, renders tribal communities defenseless with a total loss of control
over their lives and livelihoods, leaving it its trail unconscionable levels of chronic hunger.
The cumulative impacts of over two hundred years of pauperisation processes on the already fragile
socio-economic livelihood base of the tribals has been devastating – ranging from land alienation on a
vast scale to hereditary bondage. The misuse of legislative and policy measures to exploit and subjugate
the tribals, rather than to safeguard their rights, have broken their spirit. The only place where they have
been able to survive is where they have been assimilated - where they have stopped being themselves.
In the process of internal colonisation of forested regions inhabited by tribal people, an ultimately
near-fatal blow was the introduction of the legal regimes of private property to replace age-old
practices of community ownership, and individual access mediated by community assessment of
individual needs. Free access to communally owned forest lands for agriculture by settled or shifting
8 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
cultivation modes gave way to rights of cultivation requiring individual land titles. The cumulative
fate of private land ownership has been the massive and steady transfer of lands previously held by
tribal communities and cultivators into the hands of non-tribal outsiders. This process of expropriation
has continued unabated, especially since the turn of the century, in all regions of the country in which
agricultural and forest lands were held by aboriginal populations. Despite the enactment of laws in
several states to protect tribal landowners from such exploitation, tribal land alienation has continued at
a disastrous pace - both through loopholes in the law, and in direct contravention of it.
Tribal land alienation is the most important cause of the pauperisation of tribal people, rendering their
economic situation, which is extremely vulnerable even at the best of times, even more precarious5. The
access of tribal people to forests for their livelihoods has shrunk both because forests themselves have
shrunk, and because the regulatory regime continues to restrict tribal people from collecting and
processing non-timber forest produce for their livelihoods. Shifting cultivation has also been severely
restricted. The most important livelihood option of the tribal today is settled agriculture. However, as
tribal cultivators are systematically deprived of their cultivable holdings by non-tribal people and even
by government itself, they are reduced to assetless destitution.
The Department of Rural Development, Ministry of Rural Areas and Employment, Government of India
commissioned in 1997-98 a number of state- specific studies of the problem, and reports are available
with the Government of India from Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and
Maharashtra6.
The reports (unpublished) paint a grim and disturbing picture, which confirm that massive alienation of
tribal lands continues in tribal regions in all parts of the country. The magnitude of the problem can be
assessed in the Andhra Pradesh report for instance, from the fact that today non-tribals own more than
half the land in Scheduled Areas of the state. This figure is 52 per cent in Khamman district, 60 per cent
in Adilabad district and 71 per cent in Warangal district. It may be noted that these are official figures
based on land records, and would not include ‘benami’ holdings in the name of tribals, held by non-
tribals.
The continuing gravity of the problem in Madhya Pradesh has been assessed by the Census, which
reveals that the percentage of Scheduled Tribe cultivators to total Scheduled Tribe workers fell from
76.45 per cent in 1961 to 68.09 per cent in 1991. Correspondingly the percentage of Scheduled Tribe
agricultural labourers to total Scheduled Tribe workers rose from 17.73 per cent to 25.52 per cent.
Similar empirical evidence is available from other states as well.
These studies commissioned by the Government of India have revealed the causal chain that leads to
this state of affairs and confirmed that the fundamental reason for tribal land alienation is the fragile,
5
To an extent, this phenomenon of tribal land alienation is universal in tribal regions worldwide, because of the
powerful and predatory assault by the wider drive towards ‘civilisation’ on their traditional social organisation.
WORKING PAPER 9
constantly shrinking economic base of the tribals. Their traditional skills in the gathering of forest
produce lost significance with the introduction of state ownership of forests, so that from food-gatherers
they were reduced to wage-earners or encroachers. Private property in land extinguished the erstwhile
right of tribal communities to free access to land in consonance with their needs. Settled agriculture
brought with it its inevitable linkages with credit, inputs and markets, rendering the tribal even more
dependent and vulnerable.
As tribal people have an innate fear based on bitter past experience of banks, cooperative institutions and
other government sources of credit; they prefer the predictability of moneylenders despite usurious
interest rates, because they are much less impersonal and do not have bewildering opaque processes
before they sanction their loans. In any case, most banks and cooperative institutions are unwilling to
provide consumption loans, and moneylenders are thus the only sources of consumption credit.
A combination of these factors leads to an extreme dependence on moneylenders on the part of the
tribals, keeping them in perpetual debt and resulting in the mortgage and ultimate loss of their land.
Though this phenomenon is common enough, another particularly tragic outcome of this indebtedness is
the phenomenon of bondage, wherein people pledge their person, and sometimes even their families,
against a loan. Repayments are computed in such terms that it is not unusual for bondage to persist until
death, and to be passed on as a burdensome inheritance to subsequent generations. The practice of
bonded labour is known by different names in different regions. In Rajasthan, it is called Sagri; in
Andhra, Vetti; in Orissa, Gothi; in Karnataka, Jetha and in Madhya Pradesh, Naukri Nama.
Chronic indebtedness is the fundamental cause of tribal land alienation. Except for the great redemption
law during the emergency, the legal instruments to safeguard tribals against the exploitative
moneylending system and usury is weak. Moneylending in tribal areas prevails at the most exploitative
terms and causes massive alienation of tribal land, and therefore chronic hunger and distressed migration
of tribal communities.
6
Mimeo.
10 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
Figure 2
Moneylending & chronic indebtedness:
Loss of power to
negotiate (in equal
term)
The studies also establish the sad fact that government policy itself has, directly or indirectly,
contributed to the phenomenon of tribal land alienation. It has been noted in several states that tribal
land is being legally auctioned by co-operative credit societies and banks to recover dues. Auctioned
land is purchased by non-tribals as well as rich tribals. Authorities responsible for regulating the sale of
tribal lands to non-tribals have been found to frequently collude with non-tribals to defraud tribal
landowners. The same collusion has deprived tribals of their rights to land in times of land settlement, or
implementation of laws giving ownership rights to occupancy tenants.
In addition, it is estimated that some 50 million persons have been displaced since 1950 on account of
various development projects, of which more that 40 per cent are tribals. These projects include large
irrigation dams, hydroelectricity projects, open cast and underground coal mines, super thermal power
plants and mineral-based industrial units. In the name of development, tribals are displaced from their
traditional habitats and livelihoods with little or no rehabilitation, and are rendered destitute, bewildered
and pauperised by the development process7. A.K. Roy (1982) poignantly describes the case of
Jharkhand:
Darkness in the midst of light is Jharkhand… The area contains almost all the steel plants —
Bokaro, Rourkela, Jamshedpur, all the power plants of the Damodar Valley project and the
Hirakud Dam of Orissa. There is no dearth of development, but only at the cost of the people
there. Industries displace them, dams drown them, afforestation starves them.
(quoted in Shah 1990: 135)
7 For an in-depth analysis of the impact of big dams of vulnerable tribal populations, see Mander (1999)
(mimeo).
WORKING PAPER 11
Apart from a water policy that rests on the pivot of big dams, state policy on mining has also worsened
the internal colonisation of tribal populations. Massive mining and industrial projects have displaced
tribal cultivators from their lands and irrevocably disrupted the social fabric of their lives. This social
upheaval, in the context of the Bailadila Iron Ore Mines in Bastar, is vividly described by Srivastava:
After the establishment of the project, business contractors, labourers, technicians [started]
coming to the area… vast area both barren and fertile attracted the outsiders and they
established themselves on both sides of the road passing through the village Badebachelli…
allied industries and market centres were also set up… a bania (non-tribal) sells commodities of
day to day need to the tribals and acts as a moneylender… any tribal who is not in a position to
repay his debt loses his land to the money-lender… the land along the road is no longer in the
possession of the tribals. The outsiders are further encroaching on the land situated a little bit in
the interior both for cultivation and habitation… in Badebachelli village 2027 acres of land
belonging to tribal cultivators have been officially permitted to be sold to non-tribals… but legal
alienation of tribal land is not even one-tenth of the rate of illegal alienation… The thatched huts
of the tribals are slowly and gradually being replaced by the pucca (brick) tiled house of the
outsiders.
(Quoted in Shah 1990: 135)
In these large mining projects, tribals lose their land not only to the project authorities, but even to non-
tribal outsiders who converge to these areas and corner both the land and the new economic
opportunities in commerce and petty industry. Even wage employment for local tribals is rare. Shah
points out, ‘In Chotanagpur area, though the tribals constitute more than 50 per cent of the total
population, there are not more than 5 per cent of them in the industrial working force. In some of the
large firms like TISCO, Jamshedpur and Bharat Coking Coal Ltd., Dhanbad, the tribals employed are
less than 5 per cent’ (1990: 135). As Anand (1993) puts it 'Development for the nation has meant
displacement, pauperization, or, at its very best, peonage for the tribals'.
As a result of such disintegration, the majority of tribal people are trapped in anomie or normlessness,
and some in profound despair. Verrier Elwin spoke of a ‘loss of nerve’ among certain Central Indian
tribes, S.C. Roy of ‘a loss of interest in life’ among the Birhors and the Korwas, and J.H. Hutton of
‘physical decline’ among the Andamanese (Mann 1980: 33). There are symptoms of this also in the high
degrees of pathological alcoholism observed in tribal areas which has replaced the traditionally joyous
social drinking, and in the growing fissures in tribal value systems of integrity, mutual respect and
harmony with nature.
Tribal communities have also been affected from within. Indeed, there is documentation of increasing
stratification within traditionally tribal communities. As long as these communities were relatively
isolated, the major divisions were horizontal (between clans) rather than vertical8. However, in their
close encounters with the caste Hindu civilisation, some tribes became Sanskritized and absorbed
themselves into the hierarchical caste-system, regarding other tribes as inferior. Many tribes have also
begun to practice untouchability. For instance, a Kabirpanthi Bhil would be unwilling to accept a girl for
marriage from (or even food prepared by) Shambh Dal Bhils and from the non-Bhagat Bhils. Gender
relations have also worsened with the assimilation (Mann 1980: 36).
One of the gravest more recent threats that the already dispossessed tribal people face is from this
growing communalisation of tribal communities and regions in many parts of central India. Already
dispossessed, from their lands, forests and traditional ways of life - a politics based on hate is dividing
them and causing even greater violence, dispossession and distress. They are being alienated from
their traditional ways of life and culture by religious and communal organizations of different faiths.
They are also being drawn in as foot soldiers in the larger battle of hate launched by communal parties
and organisations.
There are many recent signs of success in infecting tribal communities with the sectarian virus. Years of
work by religious fundamentalists have succeeded in driving a deep wedge between Hindu and Christian
tribal communities in parts of Central India. The RSS, the national headquarters of whose tribal
programme, the Banwasi Kalyan Ashram, is located in a Christian missionary stronghold in the remote
district of Jashpur in Madhya Pradesh, has sought to persuade Christian tribals to ‘return to Hinduism’,
in a militant ‘ghar vapasi’ (home-coming) campaign. The resulting sectarian hatred erupted in 1999 to
capture international headlines, with the murder of Australian missionary Graham Staines and his two
small sons in a remote tribal settlement in Orissa, allegedly by tribal mobs. Tribal communities have in
this way been drawn into campaigns of aggressive religious militancy as pawns, ironically by a
‘civilisation’ that excluded them for centuries.
There are reports of sporadic violence and a systematic demonisation of Christian adivasis in states
like Rajasthan, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chatisgarh, Orissa and Maharashtra. These include attacks
on nuns and churches, vicious propaganda against Christianity as an alien and anti-national faith,
WORKING PAPER 13
aggressive and violent opposition to conversions to Christianity and the work of missionaries in
education and health services, and the creation of an ever-widening rift between Christian and non-
Christian adivasis. The tracts occupied by adivasis or tribal people (termed by Hindutva organisations
as vanvasis or forest dwellers) in many states of central India are now over-run by a large network of
Sangh organisations. They are encouraged by these organisations to join as part of pan-Indian
Hinduism, and to ‘return’ to the fold of Hinduism to which they allegedly belonged, and from where
they had strayed because of the so-called fraudulent inducements extended by Christian missionaries.
What may seem like innocuous religious organisations and teachers that do not have an overt agenda
of hate (such as the Gayatri Parivar, Swaminarayan and Swadhyaya movements, and Asha Ram Bapu
and Morari Bapu) are often forerunners of Sangh organisations. Their inroads aimed at advancing
Hindu beliefs and rituals among the adivasis seem to lay the stage for their subsequent transition to
militant Hindutva. Their methods of spreading Hindutva begin first with schools, with single teacher
schools, adivasi hostels and Sangh schools, run by organisations like Seva Bharati and Banvasi
Kalyan Ashram. The other method is through popularising Hindu gods and goddesses and modes of
worship and ritual, including Ram, Hanuman, Shiva, Ganesh and Durga. Christian missionaries by
and large do not preach hate, although they too pull adivasis away from their roots and ways of life.
The reasons for the rapidly growing popularity and influence of communal parties and organisations
(whose support base remains the exploiting classes of traders, moneylenders and landlords) is
probably an intense feeling of betrayal by Congress politics, as indeed much of civil society action,
that has been unable or unwilling to resist their precipitous oppression and dispossession, and instead
they have often been indifferent or even covertly complicit in these processes. Growing class
differentiation among adivasis also provides the basis for the adoption of Hindutva, as upward
mobility is often associated with sanskritisation, which then paves the way for ‘hard’ Hindutva. It is
observed that most political and social organisations are doing little to resist the rapid
communalisation of adivasis. Many secular organisations contribute to the growing religiousity that
we have observed, providing the necessary ground for the advance of communal Hindutva. Most
others, including progressive organisations and social movements, pursue their own selected sphere of
work, and are unable to summon the time and commitment required to counter the communalisation
of their constituencies. The role of secular political parties and their governments are even more
suspect. Many are sympathetic with efforts to prevent the advance of Christianity, therefore many
Sangh educational institutions are supported by Congress governments.
The long history of penetration and profound disruption of tribal communities, the sustained and
frequently brutal expropriation of tribal wealth, and the resultant anger and despair, have also resulted in
a situation in which many regions with tribal concentration are immersed in an unending cycle of
8
Anand (1993) presents a comprehensive discussion of these processes of vertical integration along class lines
and the emergence of a tribal elite.
14 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
violence. All states in the North-east of India have been ripped apart by separatist, and sometimes
sectarian, violence.
In many stretches of forested Central India, it is the People’s War Group and an array of other Naxalite
Marxist-Leninist outfits9, which continue to channelise tribal anger into violent resistance to state power.
These regions are caught in a hopeless cycle of mutually retaliatory state and Naxalite violence: so-
called police ‘encounters’ in which Naxalites are killed in cold blood by police personnel, and the
regular killing by Naxalites groups of alleged ‘police informers’ and police personnel often through
powerful land mines10. In some pockets, state authority and control have shown signs of near-collapse,
and Naxalites have described these as 'liberated areas'. There is evidence that in areas of Naxalite
influence, petty exploitation, especially by government functionaries, has been contained. However, it is
still unlikely that there is a clear and wide mandate within the local tribal communities for the
perpetuation of violence either of the Naxalites or the state. Meanwhile, as violence from both sides
nonetheless continues unabated, there seems no light at the end of the tunnel for local tribal communities
condemned to survive in the crossfire.
9 The word Naxalite derives from Naxalbari, a nondescript small town in West Bengal, which gained fame for
being the first outpost of an extreme left movement aiming at armed insurrection to overthrow the state. An
elected Marxist government, bitterly oppozed to the Naxalite movement, has been in power in West Bengal for
around two decades, and the Naxalite movement is now almost moribund in the state of its origins. However, it
remains a powerful challenge to state authority in many tribal pockets of Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh,
Maharashtra, Bihar and Orissa.
10 In the state of Andhra Pradesh where this cycle of state and Naxalite violence is possibly most entrenched
today, a group of respected ‘concerned citizens’ have attempted to engage both the state and the Naxalities in a
dialogue to end this violence. The success of the group has been to engage the Naxalites in the democratic
debate, but violence from both sides continues unabated. See the report of the Committee of Concerned Citizens
(1998).
WORKING PAPER 15
benefits of health education and communication, he said that ‘one must always remember, however, that
we do not mean to interfere with their way of life but want to help them to live it. The tribal people
should be helped to grow according to their genius and tradition’ (quoted in Mann 1980: 27).
This unusual sensitivity derived partly from the influence that anthropologists like Verrier Elwin had on
the design of India’s strategies of tribal development. Elwin stressed that in designing development
programmes for tribals, their special cultural strengths must be respected and nurtured:
Here is a section of humanity simple, tough and hardy, convinced of the wholesomeness of its
own life. Their existence has depended during the centuries of their forest mountain, existence,
upon the principles of challenge and response. Rigours of climate have not driven them away
from their home lands nor obliged them to abandon their way of life. But they do not suffer
from the obstinacy of adherence to the beliefs. They do not suffer from the obstinacy of
adherence to the beliefs. They are open, frank and willing to change when faith and reason
convince them that change is necessary.
(quoted in Ratha 1990: 111)
Elwin however was himself attacked, for instance during a debate on Excluded Areas in the Legislative
Assembly in 1936, for his alleged primitivism; for attempting to freeze the tribal people ‘in a state of
barbarism’; and perpetuating their ‘uncivilized conditions’. Decades later, he clarified that he had, no
doubt, advocated a policy of temporary isolation for certain small tribes when India was under British
rule. However he pointed that this was not to keep them as they were;
but because at that time the only contacts they had with the outside world were debasing
contacts, leading to economic exploitation and cultural destruction. Nothing positive was being
done for their welfare; national workers were not admitted into their hills; but merchants,
moneylenders, landlords and liquor-vendors were working havoc with their economy and
missionaries were destroying their art, their dances, their weaving and their whole culture.
(quoted in Ratha 1990: 106)
The search for an appropriate middle path of integration, falling between the two extremes of isolation
and assimilation, was concretised in Nehru’s landmark Panchsheel (or five-fold path, a term derived
from Buddhist philosophy which stresses the appropriateness of avoidance of extremes, always seeking
the golden mean). The five principles that he advocated for tribal development and integration were
enumerated as follows:
1. People should develop along the lines of their own genius and we would avoid imposing
anything on them. We should try to encourage in every way their own traditional arts and
culture.
16 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
Legislative protection
The importance of protecting the interests of vulnerable tribal communities was incorporated into the
Indian Constitution. Article 46 of the Constitution enjoined upon the state ‘to promote with special care
the educational and economic interests of the weaker sections of the people, and, in particular, of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, and…protect them from social injustice and all forms of
exploitation’.
There has been an array of federal and state-specific legislations for the protection of tribal communities
and regions from exploitation since Independence. Some of these laws are specifically designed for
tribal people, such as state-specific laws to prevent the transfer of tribal land to non-tribals. Some are
relevant for both Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes, such as the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled
Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989. Some apply to all disadvantaged groups, of which tribals
would generally be expected to constitute a significant proportion. These would include state-specific
laws to regulate moneylending11 and to prevent usury, the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act,
1976, the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 and the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, 198612.
It is beyond the scope of this paper to review the implementation of social justice legislation in India. It
would be sufficient to note the persistence of tribal land alienation, usury, atrocities, bondage, child
labour and low wages, suggests that the array of progressive legislation has failed to extend adequate
protection to tribal people. The reasons for this failure are that law by itself cannot protect vulnerable
groups and people. The legal system is always notoriously weighted against the poor, more so tribals for
whom the entire legal system is an alien implant. In the absence of redistributive and other political
strategies to empower tribal communities, the law by itself would inevitably have had a limited impact.
We may illustrate this with the performance of one set of laws which are designed specifically for the
protection of tribal people, namely laws to prevent transfer of land from tribal to non-tribal people.
Almost all state governments have passed laws regulating the transfer of land from tribal landowners to
non-tribals. Most such laws require that prior permission the Collector be obtained before such transfers
are permitted. Examples of such laws are section 13A of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, section
165(6) of the MP Land Revenue Code, the Bihar Scheduled Areas Regulations, the Andhra Pradesh
Scheduled Areas Land Transfer Regulations, and so on. In some states, like Andhra Pradesh and
Madhya Pradesh, there is now a total ban on transfer of land from tribals to non-tribals in scheduled
areas.
11
Moneylending may be defined as credit transactions undertaken with or without interest, with or without
mortgage of moveable or immovable property, by an individual or institution not registered by the RBI. Such an
individual or institution is the moneylender.
12
For details on the protective measures instituted and implemented by the Government, refer to Mander
(forthcoming).
18 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
A second major set of legislations have been enacted to review transfers of land which occurred in the
past from tribals to non-tribals, and to restore land to the original tribal landowners in case fraud or
illegality is established. The strongest such law is section 170 (B) of the MP Land Revenue Code, 1959.
We will look at the experience of the law in Madhya Pradesh, which has the highest concentration of
tribal people and the most progressive law in this regard (Mander, forthcoming)
The Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959 contained important provisions under Section 165 (6)
to protect tribals from such exploitation, but both through loopholes in the law and in blatant
contravention of it, tribal land alienation continued at a disastrous pace. An important study by the
Tribal Research Institute, Madhya Pradesh in 1983 concluded that ‘while on the one hand section 165(6)
of the M.P. Land Revenue Code (1959) prohibits transfer of land from aboriginals, the later part of the
same section permits it under certain conditions… All other clauses in the interest of the aboriginals
seem to be overshadowed by this and transfer of the land from the tribal to the non-tribal is a regular
feature’.
The study notes that 46.3 per cent of cases in which the Collector gave permission to the tribal
landowner to sell land was for the repayment of government loans. The reports states ‘Indebtedness is
the main cause of land alienation. Actually what happens in the area is that tribals mortgage their land to
non-tribals and take loans... They would then take loan from Government and use it for repayment of the
private debts. Having failed to pay the loan due to Government, they apply for permission to sell land
which is granted. In fact the sale is to the mortagagee, while on paper it assumes the shape of innocent
transfer for repayment of Government loans’. The study further notes that ‘the quantum of illegal
(benami) land alienation from tribals to non-tribals is like that part of the iceberg that remains under the
surface of water. Seemingly though the quantum of legal transfers is not very much, the incidence of
illegal transfers not easily detectable is very high’.
The studies commissioned by the Government of India with regard to other states, referred to in a
previous section of this report, also establish that transfers of land from tribal land owners to non-tribals
continued despite the various enactments, for a variety of reasons. In most cases, collectors or other
agencies responsible for protecting the interests of tribals while regulating such transfers, did not apply
their minds to issues of vital importance to the tribals. These include whether or not tribals had any other
alternative livelihood, sufficient land for viable cultivation even after sale, whether sufficient price was
being paid, whether the sale was actually to enable repayment for usurious loans from a moneylenders
etc. Legal transfers also took place through actions for recovery of dues and mortgages, by decrees of
civil courts, misuse of provisions for settlement of occupancy tenants, settlement operations etc.
In order to secure redressal and reversal of such systematic subversion of these protective laws, the
Madhya Pradesh legislature in 1976, and then in 1980, introduced highly significant amendments in the
Land Revenue Code, 1959 to secure belated justice to the dispossessed tribal landowners, particularly
through the section 170 (B) of the Code.
WORKING PAPER 19
There were many powerful elements in this Section 170 (B), some without parallel in any other state.
It instituted suo moto responsibility of the revenue court to enquire into all transactions from tribal to
non-tribal, even without an application from the tribal. The burden of proof was shifted to the non-
tribal to prove that fraud did not take place, and the presumption of the court supported the legal rights
of the original tribal landowner. Appearance of advocates without permission was also debarred in
these proceedings. There is also provision for a single appeal to the Collector.
Despite the existence of such a radical piece of legislation for social justice for tribals, its
implementation in most districts of the state has not been in consonance with both the letter and the
spirit of the law.
Land of which possession has been officially restored to the original tribal landowners forms only 12.65
per cent of the total land under dispute. However given the socio-economic realities facing tribals and
their powerful non-tribal opponents, it is unlikely that even after receiving formal legal possession of
even this small proportion of their erstwhile lands, tribals would have the local administrative and
political muscle to ensure that they would retain possession.
In order to understand the actual experience with regard to the implementation of progressive
measures to restore illegally expropriated land in Madhya Pradesh, we rely on two unpublished
studies by the Tribal Research Institute, Bhopal (TRI) (1983 and 1987-88), and on the direct
experience of this author in supervising the implementation of these provisions in six tribal districts
and one tribal division of Madhya Pradesh.
Implementation difficulties:
Ambiguous and weak-kneed administrative will blocks effective implementation of the progressive
legal measures designed to prevent land alienation. This failure operates in many ways. First, in most
sub-divisions in the state, cases have not been even initially registered under section 170(B) of the
Code. This is in defiance of the mandatory responsibility placed on the SDO to suo moto register
cases.
The situation is even more dismal with regard to 'benami' transactions, in which land nominally
owned by tribal landowners is in practice cultivated by non-tribals. Whereas such cases are common
knowledge in any village, they are rarely reported by patwaris and other local revenue officers or by
the non-official committees that were set up for such local investigation by the state government.
Disposal of cases tends to be slow, and the large majority of cases tend to be decided mechanically in
favour of non-tribals. A 1983 study of eight districts by the TRI reported that of the 4118 cases
registered in these eight districts, only 1782 or 43.20 per cent cases were decided, of which 1140
cases or 64.5 per cent were decided against the tribals. A close scrutiny of many of the cases decided
in favour of non-tribals show that disposal has been frequently in contravention of the law.
20 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
Further the 1983 study also revealed that in a majority of cases decided in favour of tribals, they had
not secured actual possession because of threats and violence by the non-tribals in possession of the
land, along with delays and complicity of local revenue functionaries. The 1987-88 study reported
that fresh cases of tribal land alienation have considerably reduced under the impact of protective
legislation, but restoration of land already lost is tardy.
Indebtedness:
We have seen that the fundamental cause of tribal land alienation is chronic indebtedness. No law to
protect tribals can be successful unless it is complemented by measures to meet their genuine credit
needs, including for consumption, and to protect them from usury.
redress, are they likely to succeed. However, this rarely happens. These same problems act as barriers
to the implementation of all forms of legislation for the protection of tribal communities.
Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Karnataka, Kerala,
Madhya Pradesh, Maharasthra, Manipur, Orissa, Rajasthan, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh
and West Bengal and two Union Territories, namely the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Daman &
Diu’ (Government of India 1998-99: 32).
The instruments of the TSP and ITDP did result in the allocation of a greater proportion of budgetary
resources to tribal development. Enhanced tribal sub-plan flows and expenditures are presented in
Figure 4. Since the Fifth Plan, these have in the context of the Government of India often exceeded the
proportion of tribal people to the total population. (Figure 5). Flows to TSP are officially monitored for
various departments of the central and state governments14.
10
9.62
9.5 9.46
9 8.77
8.47
8.08 8.08 8.08 8.08
7.85 7.85 7.85
in Percentage
4.25
4
5th Plan 6th Plan 7th Plan Annual Plan 1990- Annual Plan 1991- 8th Plan Annual Plan 1997-
91 92 98
13 Denotified Tribes are tribal groups that were designated as criminal tribes during British rule. They suffered
extensively from repression, and continue to remain vulnerable in Independent India, because they have not
been freed from the stigma of their past.
14
For a more detailed description of various schemes for tribal assistance as also the TSP, see Planning
Commission (2000).
WORKING PAPER 23
Figure 5. Tribal Sub-Plan Flow and Expenditure (5th Plan to VIIIth Plan) 16853.13
18000
16000
14000
12000
8023.76
10000
7163.71
e
8000
4286.47 4897.76
4061.35
6000
4000 977.26
1102.84
2000
0
Vth VIth VIITH VIIIth
OUTLAY EXPENDITURE
However, there were many limitations to this strategy. Firstly, mere enhancement of budgetary
allocations does not lead automatically to enhanced welfare. The implementation of protective measures
that do not involve financial outlays may be far more significant.
Moreover, in both central and state governments, the political objective of securing allocations under
TSP in proportion to tribal populations was rarely achieved. Even when it was achieved, it was often the
result of innovative accounting mechanisms rather than genuine enhancement of outlays on programmes
for tribal development. In the Fifth Plan, expenditure on major investments, like industrial and large
irrigation projects, was treated as indivisible expenditures and not included under the TSP. However,
from the Sixth Plan onwards, many of these expenditures were shown to be for tribal welfare.
In states with high tribal concentration, the bureaucratic ploy frequently resorted to is that described as
`booking’ of expenditures to TSP. The unstated purpose appears to be to inflate figures of expenditures
for programmes allegedly for tribal welfare, without disturbing the actual balance in favour of other,
more powerful mainstream budgetary demands. Expenditures on staff, institutions and general plan
expenditures, such as a highway passing through the tribal plan area, are routinely booked to TSP. Even
subsidies given to private industry for setting up industrial units in tribal areas are shown as part of the
TSP. This is particularly ironic in that projects which have forcibly uprooted and dispossessed local
tribal populations are transformed, through such budgetary fictions, to projects that appear to have been
for the development of tribal people.
Similarly, the ITDP strategy in most states was a non-starter. Senior functionaries were posted as Project
Officers in charge of ITDPs in many states, but they were rarely delegated significant financial or
administrative authority over other departments working in tribal areas.
What is needed is that budgetary resources proportional to the tribal population in the state be separated
from the overall plan right at the outset. For these resources, treated as a separate pool, genuine TSPs
24 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
should be prepared in response to the genuine needs and aspirations of the tribal populations. The TSP
should have been aggregated to the ITDPs and MADPs, and plans should emerge from below, by a
genuine process of consultation. Only through thoroughgoing decentralisation of funds and authority to
sub-district concentrations of tribal people can it be ensured that a just share of national and state
budgetary resources are channelised for programmes which meet the felt needs of STs.
Educational strategies
The continuing gap between literacy levels of STs and the general population is shown in Figure 3. The
largest proportion of centrally-sponsored programmes for tribal development is related to the single
sector of education. This same sector tends to dominate budgetary allocations even in state governments.
In states like Madhya Pradesh, tribal education is administered directly by the tribal welfare department
and is separate from the education department on the premise that the educational needs of tribal
communities are at variance from the needs of the rest of the population.
The major strategies in various tribal states have been the establishment of hostels, scholarships,
freeships, mid-day meals, free uniforms, books and stationery, remedial coaching, special coaching for
competitive examinations, and vocational training (most successfully and innovatively in the field of
computers). Under the major schemes of central assistance, ‘the scheme of girls’ hostel, which was
started in the Third Plan, is a useful instrument for spreading education among Scheduled Tribe girls,
whose literacy still stood at 18.19 per cent as per 1991 census against the general female literacy of
39.23 per cent’ (Government of India 1998-99: 35). A similar scheme was introduced in 1989-90 for the
construction of boys’ hostels. The Ashram School scheme was launched in 1990-91 with the objective
to extend educational facilities through residential schools for Scheduled Tribe students. A new scheme
for Schedule Tribes Girls Low Literacy pockets was introduced in 1993-94 and implemented through
non-governmental organisations:
Districts having literacy rates for Scheduled Tribe women of less than 10 per cent as per 1991
census are covered. 136 Districts in 11 States of Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar,
Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West
Bengal are covered under this scheme. The female literacy among certain primitive tribal
groups is also very low. The scheme of educational complexes covers such primitive Tribal
Groups also. The Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment [Government of India] provides
full assistance for setting up of the education complexes.
(Government of India 1998-99: 35, 36)
The strategy of special tribal hostels and residential schools makes eminent sense, because tribals
reside traditionally in extremely small and dispersed settlements in difficult and remote areas.
Therefore, the logistics of serving each of these settlements with day schools are unmanageable. The
WORKING PAPER 25
solution has been found in locating residential tribal schools and hostels even in the deep forest
interiors, although quality and basic amenities remain a problem. The amounts paid as scholarship and
stipends to tribal students have enabled resource-strapped tribal families to invest in education, even
though there is evidence that part of the money is diverted by some families for non-educational
purposes.
Tribal hostels and residential schools in remote interiors are notoriously poorly managed, plagued by
badly maintained buildings and leakages and delays in payments to students and for purchases.
Teachers, if they teach at all, are often poorly motivated and sometimes display prejudices against
tribal children. The greatest failing has been in the context of education in tribal schools. The sensitive
rhetoric of stated tribal policy of ‘integration’ and enabling tribal communities to ‘develop according
to their own genius’ is entirely forgotten, as mainstream school curricula are imposed wholesale on
tribal schools. The problem is not merely the medium of instruction; again, contrary to stated national
policy of enabling children at the primary level to study in their mother-tongue, there are almost no
tribal schools in which teaching is conducted in tribal languages. Even more serious is the cultural
bias of school curricula, which tends to be urban, upper-caste Hindu in content. Studies have also
established patriarchal and communal trends. Even the dedicated Ramakrishna Mission schools in
remote regions of Bastar and Arunachal Pradesh, which have been actively promoted by the Indian
state, provide high-quality education but of a kind that is exclusively and unapologetically Sankritized
Hindu in terms of its cultural moorings, values and idioms. The Christian missionary schools in tribal
regions country-wide have equally aimed at assimilation, although into a different cultural ethos15.
However, despite all these limitations, education is a growing and powerfully felt need of tribal
communities. In the two-decade experience of this writer in tribal regions in the interiors of Madhya
Pradesh, the most visible evolution in tribal aspirations even in remote tribal hinterlands and among
so-called primitive tribes, has been for education. The attraction is partly for eligibility for
employment, particularly in government. However, the major impetus is to acquire skills to negotiate
the complex, exploitative external world. The challenge of meeting these aspirations without
alienating tribal communities from the roots that sustain them, remains.
Self-governance by tribal communities
In the winter of 1996, without fanfare and in fact largely unnoticed, the Indian Parliament passed what
is without doubt the most significant legal measure for tribal people since Independence. Earlier, the
73rd and 74th constitutional amendments had inserted Part IX in the Constitution relating to panchayati
raj, but Parliament consciously excluded Scheduled Areas from the operation of these laws, providing
15
The Gandhian Thakkar Bapa, often on the opposite side of the fence from Verrier Elwin with his
'integrationist' approach to tribal policy, was one of the first to advocate modern education for tribals 'to develop
a leadership for the tribals in order that they may participate in the political life of the country' (Anand 1993:
12). See Anand (1993) for a wide-ranging study of the role of education in creating such a tribal elite and
promoting intra-community stratification in tribal groups.
26 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
that it may separately extend these laws to Scheduled Areas with suitable modifications. A committee
constituted for this purpose chaired by Dileep Singh Bhuria, MP, recommended wide powers to the
gram sabha or assembly of all village residents in Scheduled Areas in 1995. The 1996 Act is based
substantially on these recommendations.
The underlying premise of the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (hereafter
referred to as PESA) is that tribal communities can be brought back from the brink of economic,
social and cultural disaster only if they are restored effective and comprehensive control over their
own destinies. Accordingly, this law seeks to create legal spaces and institutions that carry the
potential to arrest, and even reverse the sombre recent history of tribal communities.
PESA is unprecedented in that it gives radical self-governance powers to the tribal community and
recognizes its traditional community rights over natural resources. Prior to the passage of this Act, laws
passed by central and state governments were applied mechanically to tribal areas, even when these
contravened traditional tribal practices and institutions. To take an example that we have seen, with the
introduction of legal regimes based on private property and state ownership of forests and common
property resources, the traditional control of the tribal communities over natural resources broke down,
destroying their sustainable livelihood base. Chronic indebtedness to the moneylender, savage land
alienation and large-scale migration were the results. Further, alien state institutions like the police and
judiciary came to supercede traditional modes of conflict resolution, often with less than successful
outcomes.
PESA opened a new chapter in the governance of tribal regions, helping to resolve these enormous
crippling distortions, and ending two centuries of resistance of the tribal people to the imposition of
formal state institutions.
The gram sabha, which is the locus of political power under the PESA, may be no more than a
convenient administrative label for the relevant assembly; instead, the law focuses on settlements
which the tribal people themselves perceive to be traditional and organic entities. In fact this is the
first law that empowers people to redefine their own administrative boundaries. PESA provides that
the tribal gram sabha so defined would be empowered to approve all development plans, control all
functionaries and institutions of all social sectors, as well as control all minor water bodies, minor
minerals and non-timber forest resources. It would also have the authority to control land alienation,
impose prohibition, manage village markets and resolve internal conflicts by traditional modes.
In one stroke, the Act create a space for people’s empowerment, genuine popular political
participation, convergent community action, sustainable people oriented development and auto-
generated emancipation.16 In reality, however, since its passage it has mostly remained forgotten in
the corridors of power and has not become part of mainstream political discourse. Many state
16
For a more detailed discussion of the Bhuria Committee report as well as a critical reading of PESA, see
Savyasaachi (1998), who argues that the PESA does not go far enough in advancing genuine self-rule for tribal
communities.
WORKING PAPER 27
governments have passed laws not fully in conformity with the central law. Academics,
administrators, policy makers and even parliamentarians remain unaware of it. The tribal communities
informed about the provisions of the law greeted it with enthusiasm but found themselves
progressively handicapped by the lack of actual preparedness to negotiate development and
democratisation in the manner envisaged by the law.
The real danger thus is that the far-reaching changes introduced in the law will remain a dead letter
unless they are translated into action and sustained by a process of awareness and capacity building
among the tribal communities. There are a number of grave problems that must be overcome if the
law is genuinely to transform tribal reality, but it is important to stress that none of these barriers to
tribal self-government are insurmountable. We devote the following sections to studying these issues
and exploring possible solutions.
been the most visible form of oppression17. Enforcement of PESA is perceived as weakening the
stranglehold of the forest department, and it is instructive to study the interpretation of PESA favoured
by the forest department for its attempts to minimise the department’s loss of the control.
Firstly, the forest department states that the power of gram sabhas can extend only to forest located
within the revenue boundaries of a village. This one provision, if accepted, would nullify the law
because no reserved forest, and in most states, no protected forest is located within a revenue village.
The spirit of the law is clearly to extend ownership to the gram sabha to MFP from forests located in the
vicinity of the village which they traditionally access. In fact, in the case of Joint Forest Management
(JFM), the Madhya Pradesh government vested the village forest committees with authority to manage
forest falling within a radius of five kilometres of the boundaries of the village. A similar dispensation
would be eminently suitable in the case of PESA.
Secondly, MFP has been defined to exclude cane and bamboo. This is contrary to the botanical
definition of MFP which is ‘that part of a tree that can be sustainably harvested without damage to the
survival of the tree’. More significantly, it denies access to poor tribal artisans to two types of MFP on
which their livelihoods are most critically dependent. On the other hand, we have already observed how
state policy has subsidized bamboo to the extent that these are supplied at 1 to 5 per cent of their market
rate for private industry.
However, the greatest semantic contortions are reserved for the forest department interpretation of the
concept of `ownership’ of MP by the gram sabha. It is stated that ownership does not provide the gram
sabha the right to take any decisions related to stewardship, management or sustainable harvesting of
MFPs. Contrary to a whole body of empirical evidence from the national and international experience of
JFM and community control of forests, it is claimed that the exercise of `ownership’ of MFPs by gram
sabhas in this sense, would inevitably lead to a destruction of forests. Therefore, ‘ownership’ as
provided for in PESA is reinterpreted to mean the right to net revenues from MFP, after retaining
administrative expenses of the forest department.
17
One piece of anecdotal evidence, recounted by Verrier Elwin, is particularly revealing. When queried about
his idea of paradise, a tribal described it as miles and miles of forest, but without a forest guard!
18
The remainder of this sub-section is derived substantially from Mander and Naik (1999).
WORKING PAPER 29
The rationale of this provision is that the formal contemporary systems for resolving conflicts – the
courts, the police, jails and statutory law – stand increasingly discredited in the countryside. They are
seen to be heavily weighed against the poor, ridden by corruption, delays and mystification. They
have substantially lost legitimacy as reliable institutions for ensuring cheap, quick, unbiased and
transparent justice for rural people, especially those belonging to disadvantaged groups.
The PESA formulation opens significant windows of opportunity for tribal peoples to construct alternate
community-based structures for delivery of justice. However, before these opportunities can be realized,
a host of extremely difficult questions need resolution.
A literal interpretation of the PESA formulation seems to suggest that restoration of customary modes of
conflict resolution in itself would ensure more reliable justice. However, any such uncritical faith in
tradition and custom as intrinsically superior vehicles for justice delivery cannot be supported
empirically. Untouchability and witch-hunting are both traditions, and the latter is particularly firmly
grounded in many tribal areas and notorious for suppressing female assertion.
The law somewhere also presumed the survival of `homogenous’, ‘egalitarian’ and `altruistic’ tribal
communities, but tribal societies have undergone vast changes. Cultural transformation has followed the
drastic mutation of their material conditions. As we have already seen, the egalitarian internal
organisation of tribal societies has also in many cases been distorted, particularly in relation to women.
Alcoholism and other social symptoms of the degradation and exploitation of tribal societies have
resulted in tribal women bearing nearly all the burdens of balancing the household economy. The
breakdown of traditional control over consumption of alcohol has increased male irresponsibility,
drained domestic resources and encouraged greater domestic violence. Ironically, women have become
partners in their own oppression, as it is mainly women who manufacture illicit liquor. Although rape is
still uncommon in tribal societies, domestic violence is rampant and the community has ceased to
intervene, regarding this as a ‘personal matter’. Women are equally terrorized by witch-hunting, because
every woman is a potential witch who can be stoned to death. Women have virtually no right to
property. They are also excluded from any traditional modes of conflict resolution, even when they are
parties to the dispute. Tribal societies have also begun to practice untouchability, and oppress weaker
tribal groups.
Panchayat literally means five persons sitting together to adjudicate, but panchayats have often
performed this function as a bastion of male dominance, excluding women, young people, the poor and
socially disadvantaged groups. For example, Warli tribals traditionally resolve disputes by inviting the
two parties to the dispute to nominate any two persons as panches to adjudicate. The four nominated
persons in turn nominate a fifth panch. This seems an excellent mechanism, except for one critical rider
- traditionally only men can be nominated as panches, even where women are parties to a dispute. In the
discussions this writer held in various Warli gram sabhas in the Thane district of Maharashtra, women
consistently stated their preference for the formal systems of conflict resolution even when acutely
30 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
conscious of the limitations of these systems, very probably in a reaction against the severe gender bias
of traditional systems.
Our first problem is that whereas the need for alternate local community-based institutions for justice
delivery is fully acknowledged, the extent to which these institutions must be rooted in tradition is
unclear. The need to seek, unravel, and understand traditional modes is also admitted; however, the
yardstick of contemporary universal standards of justice and equity must also test these modes. There
is need for far greater understanding, based on empirical research, about the principal traditional
modes of justice adjudication in major tribal groups in Schedule V areas. Are these traditional systems
accessible to all sections of the community? Can they deliver quicker, cheaper and more reliable
justice, when compared to the formal judicial system? Answers to these questions must be framed
with particular reference to women, dalits and other disadvantaged groups within tribal communities.
Would localized community-based institutions for justice delivery function in the best interests of the
disadvantaged, in village communities often riven by profound, bitter and ancient divisions of class,
caste, gender and age? If such institutions are in fact established, what safeguards should be introduced
to secure the interests of the relatively powerless within the community?
Another set of problems relates to the procedure for a rural collective to adjudicate. The language of
PESA requires that the gram sabha be competent to safeguard the customary mode of dispute
resolution. This seems to suggest firstly that detailed procedures would be laid down by the gram
sabhas, drawing from tradition, and not spelled out in detail in the law itself. Whereas this interpretation
has the merit of enabling local wisdom to flourish, definite broad safeguards are required to ensure
conformity with universal principles of justice and to protect weaker groups.
The PESA formulation also suggests that the gram sabha as a collective would not necessarily
adjudicate disputes. It would only lay down procedures, and monitor proceedings. However, the
establishment of local committees to adjudicate is fraught with dangers. The Madhya Pradesh Gram
Nyayalaya Adhiniyam, 1996 for instance, provides for the constitution of Gram Nyayalayas, by the
unanimous nomination of seven members by the Janapad (Block) Panchayat. Political nominees
would pack a nominated body of the kind envisaged in the Madhya Pradesh Act, and a committee of
political nominees would be very likely be no more than an extension of the local power elite, but
lacking the legitimacy of either tradition or of the rule of law. People disadvantaged by caste, class
and gender, would be severely disabled in securing justice in such a situation.
Some of the other major issues on which the law must be unambiguous include the following:
• On which type of issue should gram sabhas be empowered to adjudicate? Should their jurisdiction
be voluntary or mandatory? If the two parties desire to access alternate institutions, which would
prevail? What would be the procedures and powers to summon witnesses, secure justice and enforce
decisions? What would be the powers, if any, of the gram sabha to award punishments?
• There are also other issues related to the interface between the community-based and formal
systems. Would their jurisdiction be concurrent or exclusive? Which agency/agencies would be
WORKING PAPER 31
bound to implement the decisions of the gram sabha? What powers would the gram sabha enjoy for
the enforcement of its decisions? What would be the appeal mechanisms?
In summary, it is true that rural communities have faced monumental difficulties in securing justice in
their interface with formal institutions for dispute adjudication and justice delivery. However, great care
needs to be exercised in replacing the established institutions with others less tested, even when these are
intended to be more reliable vehicles for speedy and impartial justice, especially for disadvantaged
sections of rural society.
If a gram sabha in the Scheduled Areas finds that any person other than members of an
aboriginal tribes, is in possession of any land of a Bhumiswami20 belonging to an aboriginal
tribe, without any lawful authority, it shall restore the possession of such land to whom it
originally belonged and if that person is dead to his legal heirs;
Provided that if the gram sabha fails to restore the possession of such land, it shall refer the
matter to the Sub-Divisional Officer who shall restore the possession of such land within
three months from the date of receipt of the reference.
(Quoted in Mander and Naik 1999: 6)
19
For fuller details, see Mander and Naik (1998)
20
landowner
32 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
The Madhya Pradesh formulation has the merit of ensuring much clearer compliance with PESA. It
places direct powers with the gram sabha for restoration of land illegally alienated from a tribal land-
owner by a non-tribal. It also places a duty on a senior revenue authority - the SDO - to restore
possession within 3 months if the gram sabha fails in this. However, for this provision to become
operational, far more detailed instructions regarding the procedures to be followed by the gram sabha
for the exercise of such quasi-judicial authority would be required. There are also, as we shall observe,
other aspects of regulating tribal land-alienation from which the gram sabhas are still excluded.
As stated earlier, PESA requires state governments to specifically empower panchayats at appropriate
levels and gram sabhas in Scheduled Areas with powers to prevent alienation of land and to take
appropriate action in this regard. These powers are clearly intended to extend to (a) regulating the
transfer of land from STs to non-tribals; (b) detecting instances of land unlawfully alienated from STs;
and (c) powers to restore illegally alienated land to the original tribal land-owners. Let us consider
each of these in turn.
The regulation of land transfers from STs to non-tribals involves firstly decisions regarding whether
any particular sale of agricultural land from STs to non-tribals may be permitted at all. Many state
governments have now imposed a blanket ban on such transfers in Scheduled areas. However, in
states where such transfers are permitted with the consent of superior revenue authorities (Collector or
SDO), the concurrence of the gram sabhas should be made mandatory before the revenue authority is
empowered to extend permission. Such regulation also implies ensuring that a non-exploitative price
is paid to the tribal with an actual transfer of the amount (and not, for instance, adjustment against
some old loan from a moneylender). Here again, the gram sabha must concur that the price being
offered is adequate and just, and payment by cheque in the joint names of male and female heads of
the family wherever applicable– be made in the presence of the gram sabhas.
Regulation by the gram sabha also implies interventions to provide relief in the event that permission
for sale by a Scheduled Tribe is refused. The gram sabha and gram panchayat may be encouraged
and assisted to establish alternate community based modes of securing ready credit, like a community
village fund or gram kosh, for times of distress and for productive purposes. In addition, the gram
panchayat may assist the tribal to secure credit from a co-operative or nationalized bank.
We move now to the second type of the power that we suggested that panchayats and gram sabhas
need to be equipped with in this matter viz., detection of instances of land unlawfully alienated from
STs. The gram sabha cannot be expected to detect this on an on-going basis unless land records are
placed directly under their control. Exploitation in matters of land titles in rural India is sustained, at
least in part, by the notorious monopoly of patwaris or village accountants over land records. They
have exercised uninterrupted tyranny over rural India for centuries, because they typically function
unencumbered by any kind of transparency or accountability requirements. Transfer of control over
land records to the gram sabha, or at least to the village panchayat, as has been recently accomplished
in Madhya Pradesh, would enable a breach in this long tradition of official tyranny. For instance, a
WORKING PAPER 33
provision that the record of rights — which lists each plot of land and the recorded owner — be read
out and approved by the gram sabha, would enable detection of benami land or that held by force
illegally by non-tribals. In addition, the requirement that all court rulings for the restoration of land
illegally expropriated from tribals by non-tribals, would enable gram sabhas to detect instances of
non-compliance with court orders, which remain legion in most states.
The third kind of legal empowerment envisaged for tribal gram sabhas is to restore illegally alienated
land to tribal landowners. One procedure may be as follows. Both sides are invited to adduce
evidence, verbal or documentary, to establish their claims before the gram sabha. Any other member
of the gram sabha with knowledge of the case would also be allowed to give evidence. It would be
mandatory for the patwari to give testimony. There would be full rights of cross-examination, but no
party would be allowed representation by a legal practitioner.
In the end, the gram sabha would take a decision either unanimously or by majority opinion,
established by show of hands. The relevant laws would have to be amended to explicitly state that the
decision of the gram sabha in this regard would have the same weight in law and the same binding
quality as the decision of the lowest revenue court. In the event of an appeal by the non-tribal, it
would be mandatory for the court to ensure compliance with the decisions of the gram sabha to
restore land to the tribal before considering the appeal. Also, if the gram sabha’s directions to restore
land to the tribal are not complied with, the gram sabhas or the tribal concerned may inform the court,
and it would be mandatory for the court to ensure the restoration of the land to the tribal within 3
months.
amendment to its laws related to moneylending, but this has not yet been passed by the state
legislature. The governments of Gujarat and Maharashtra have amended the Bombay Moneylenders
Act, 1946 to make consultations with the gram sabha mandatory before the issue of a license to a
moneylender (Srivastava 1999). However this cannot be considered an adequate compliance with
either the letter or spirit of the law, because it does not empower gram sabhas to intervene in any way
to provide relief in the event of a breach of the conditions of license. A more effective procedure may
be as follows:
In any Schedule V area, any person or institution that proposes to engage in moneylending with any
resident of a village, must apply first for permission to the senior revenue court of the Sub-Division
Officer (Civil) (the SDO) in whose jurisdiction the village is located. The application must indicate
full details of the terms under which credit is proposed to be offered (including rate of interest,
mortgage if any, enforcement mechanisms and outcomes of default, the purposes for which credit will
be offered, and full details of the proposed moneylender).
The SDO will confirm that the proposed terms of credit are in conformity with the relevant laws at
that time. Those applications that are in conformity will be forwarded for consideration to the next
meeting of the relevant gram sabha. The gram sabha will consider the application, especially with
regard to the following:
• Do the village residents require credit of the kind being offered?
• Are the terms of credit being offered considered reasonable by the gram sabha?
• Does the track record of the moneylender suggest that he or she is fit to be entrusted with the
responsibility for moneylending?
Only if the gram sabha, after these deliberations, recommends the grant of license, may the
moneylender be granted license by the village panchayat.
In case there is the allegation of any breach of any condition of license by the moneylender, the
person affected, or any other resident of the village, may file a complaint to this effect to the village
panchayat. It would be mandatory for the secretary of the village panchayat to ensure that the
complaint is included for consideration in the next gram sabha meeting. It would be mandatory also
for the moneylender to be given notice to appear with all concerned records in the next meeting of the
gram sabha. In case the moneylender refuses to appear or fails to produce the relevant documents, the
gram sabha may inform the SDO who after confirming these facts, would be authorized by law to
issue a non-bailable warrant against the moneylender, to ensure appearance.
The gram sabha would elect a four-member committee, including one elected representative who is a
Scheduled Tribe, one village-level government official, and two other village residents of whom at
least one must be a woman. This committee would then proceed to examine the moneylender, the
recipient of credit, the complainant, and any witnesses who may be produced. They would also
examine the records. All these examinations and investigations will be completed in the presence of
WORKING PAPER 35
the gram sabha. The committee will then pass a summary verdict. The verdict will include decisions
whether there was indeed a breach of license by the moneylender, the relief including recovery of
cash or mortgaged property, and suspension or cancellation of license. The gram sabha must also lay
down a time limit in which its decision must be complied with. The gram sabha will also conclude
whether the moneylender has also been guilty prima facie of any offence under the Indian Penal Code
(IPC) or Atrocities Act.
In the event of any failure to comply with the decision of the gram sabha in the prescribed period, the
village panchayat would be bound to inform the SDO of this breach in writing. The SDO would be
bound by law to ensure compliance within three months, including recovery and restoration of
property wherever applicable. Apart from this, if the gram sabha had concluded that prima facie there
was an offence under the IPC, the village panchayat would be bound to file an FIR with the police
station of appropriate jurisdiction.
A similar procedure would apply in the event of any allegation of moneylending being transacted with
any member of the gram sabha by a person or institution without any valid license.
However, as in the case of moneylending, nowhere have state governments made any such move
towards achieving a powerful interpretation of PESA in accordance with the spirit of the law, and with a
genuine will to create legal spaces to enable tribal communities to combat long years of exploitation by
moneylenders.
Restoring some tribal rights to forests: Controversies over the Forest Bill
The process of internal colonisation that accompanied, and subsequently survived, imperial rule is
best illustrated by the state-led resource emasculation of forests, the most important endowment of
tribal communities for survival and livelihood. According to Lynch, ‘there are about a 100 million
forest dwellers’ and ‘another 275 million who depend on the forest produce for their livelihood’
(1992, quoted in Saxena 1996). Though exact figures are not known, a substantial proportion of these
would be tribal people.21
Yet, considerations of maximising state revenues from forests have dominated forest policy from
colonial times. Community control over forests was no longer recognised legally, and the state
became the ultimate owner and custodian of forests. Forest dwellers became ‘encroachers and
21
In terms of occupation, there remain today only few tribal communities - like the Birhors of Madhya Pradesh,
Chenchu, Yenadi and Yeribula of Madhya Pradesh and the Onge, Jarawa and Sentinelese of the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands - which are entirely dependent on forestry and food-gathering. Even they barter these products
for other goods in village markets. Most forest-dwelling tribals continue to depend on the collection of NTFPs
as a major supplementary source of livelihood. An estimated million tribal cultivators engage in slash and burn
shifting cultivation, covering 26.7 million acres of land. This system is known variously as ‘jhum’ in the North-
eastern states, ‘poor’ in Andhra Pradesh, ‘dahiya’ or ‘bewar’ in Madhya Pradesh and ‘komar’ ‘bringu’ or
‘gudia’ in Orissa. Today settled (but usually low productivity) dryland subsistence agriculture is the
predominant source of livelihood for the large majority of tribal people. Cottage industries are the mainstay of
small, scattered tribes, such as a bamboo and cane artisans.
36 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
trespassers,’ as monoculture and clean felling for timber extraction dominated forestry operations.
The conversion of complex forest into genetically simplified industrial plantations add to state
revenues and benefit industries, but a wide range of species critical to the survival and well-being of
tribal forest dwellers are depleted severely and sometimes even lost forever.
The government has created new rights of industrialists to forest produce at highly subsidised prices.
Saxena (1996) provides instances of industries being supplied bamboo for the manufacture of papers
at 1 to 5 per cent of the auction rate, whereas purchase at auctions is the only source of bamboo for
tribal artisans, such as the Koya of Orissa. State monopolies over collection of NTFPs have also
followed the same pattern of maximising corporate interests and state revenue, at the expense of the
subsistence of large populations of tribal collectors. In contrast to deregulation in the corporate sector,
irrational barriers to the processing of non-timber forest products (NTFPs), even for the manufacture
of brooms, leafs plates and agarbattis abound22.
In an affidavit to the Supreme Court of India on 21 June 2004, the Government of India made a very
significant admission - that ‘the historical injustice done to the tribal forest dwellers through non-
recognition of their traditional rights must be finally rectified’. This marked a historic departure from
the colonial perspective that has characterised the state regulations of forests, which regards forests as
preserves of nature that necessarily should ideally be devoid of human habitation; and which regards
the state as the sole legal and natural monopolistic guardian of the country’s forest wealth.
The Indian Forest Act, 1927, the Wild Life Protection Act, 1972, and the Forest Conservation Act,
1980, are all based on the common principle that any human ‘interference’ in a forest ecosystem
would lead to its destruction. This legal perspective ignores that tribal groups also form an integral
and natural part of this ecosystem, both surviving from the forest and at the same time preserving it.
Indeed, just prior to its admission to the highest court of the land, the Indian government had ordered
the eviction of all forest encroachers on 3 May 2002, leading to the expulsion of around 300,000
impoverished cultivators from over 152,000 hectares in just four months. Mass protests and
destitution finally persuaded the Government of India to introduce the Scheduled Tribes (Recognition
of Forest Rights) Bill in Parliament on 13 December 2005.
The Bill states that it seeks ‘to recognize and vest the forest rights and occupation in forest land in
forest dwelling Scheduled Tribes…’ These include the rights to hold (live on, and cultivate) forest
lands, but denies the right to hunt. It also casts duties on the forest dwelling tribal communities to
protect forests.
The Bill has led to a highly polarized and sometimes bitter debate between ‘tribal rights’ and
‘environmental’ lobbies. Whereas the former extended a cautious welcome to the long belated
initiative of Government, the latter warned of cataclysmic consequences to forests and the
environment in India, and particularly the survival of tigers and other large mammals. However, it is
22 For a detailed exposition of the adverse impact of forest policy on forest dwellers, see Saxena (1996).
WORKING PAPER 37
dangerous to pit the interests of forests as irreconcilably opposed to those of forest dwellers, as
extreme positions on both sides of this debate openly or tacitly succeed in doing. The truth is that if
forests are destroyed, no single group will suffer more than indigenous people themselves.
From the environmentalists, a more moderate and nuanced position has been articulated by Shekhar
Singh, who feels (in an unpublished note circulated by him) that the Bill is ‘a good one that addresses
a long felt need’. However, he identifies some of its major weaknesses, listed below:
1. It covers only scheduled tribes, although many other marginalized communities, apart from
tribals, have historically been dependent on forest lands and resources. Besides, restricting this act
to only the tribals would also create major implementation problems, as tribals and non-tribals co-
exist in and around forest areas, using and sharing the same resources. If the tribals are suddenly
given rights over these resources there is a likelihood of social tension and even violence.
2. The inclusion of national parks and sanctuaries into the definition of ‘forest land’ (section 2(f)),
demarcating areas that should become ‘core areas’ (S. 2(b)), is bound to create major problems
both for the wildlife and for the people involved. To allot provisional rights to people living in
core areas for the next five years, as proposed, would be disastrous for wildlife. The major battle
is not against poaching but against habitat destruction and shortage of resources. Human
communities compete for the same grazing land and water, for their livestock, that wild animals
need for their survival. Many endangered species are wary of human beings and would abandon
areas frequented or inhabited by humans, thereby further reducing their range, and subsequently
their chances of survival. As Shekhar Singh states: ‘It is for this reason that the Parliament of
India had ordained that a small part of the country, currently less than 2%, should be kept
inviolate, as national parks and core areas of sanctuaries. We owe it to the future generations of
human beings, and to all the other races of living things that share this planet with the human race,
to respect this very wise decision of the Parliament of India, and not reverse it now, when the
danger is even greater’. He suggests that this provision be deleted. Instead, a national task force
should be constituted, which, within a time frame of 12 months, would rationalise the boundaries
of all national parks and sanctuaries:
38 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
a. Excluding from these, national parks and sanctuary areas that have little or no ecological value,
but large human populations (there are many such areas).
b. For those areas where there is both significant ecological value and the existence of human
populations, assessing whether any other contiguous areas with similar ecological value are
available, and have less or no human population. If so, these could then be included in the
national park or sanctuary, and the area of similar value but with large populations, excluded.
c. Where areas with significant ecological value have no alternatives, identifying these as areas from
where the resident populations need to be rehabilitated, with all due compensation and
consideration.
The areas so excluded from national parks and sanctuaries, would then be treated like all other forest
lands, with people entitled to rights, as per the law. Moderate voices such as these, which try to reconcile
the interests of both forests and forest dwellers, should be heeded.
Those who defend the Bill argue first that the initiative of the Government of India is in full
conformity with the international normative framework for the preservation of the rights of
indigenous people23. The international commitments of protecting biodiversity, indigenous and local
communities require that the Governments should: ‘Protect and encourage customary use of
biological resources in accordance with traditional’ sustainable use and practices as well as
‘indigenous organizational structures’ and legislation intended to promote them as ‘consistent with the
needs and views of indigenous and local communities, comprehensive and enforceable’.24 Countries
should ‘cease all ... involuntary sedentarization of mobile’ indigenous livelihood and ‘recognise
collective and customary rights of mobile’ livelihood - of gathering of forest produce, shifting
cultivation, etc - and their ‘mobility as a vital livelihood system... relevant for conservation’ by
‘customary laws and dynamic scales of land use’ and having ‘seasonal and temporal rights’ instead of
settled land ownership.25
The international commitments on the sustainable use and conservation of forest biodiversity with
respect to indigenous and local communities require that the Governments should ‘respect, preserve
and maintain... practices of indigenous and local communities’ by their ‘continued stewardship... of...
lands and waters traditionally occupied or used by them’26. Countries should ‘protect the... practices
of these communities relevant to the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity, taking
into consideration customary laws’ and ‘legislation governing access to genetic resources that also
23 These arguments have been excellently martialled by indigenous rights Finnish activist Ville-Veiko in an
informal note circulated in Sept 2006 (mimeo)
24
UN Convention on the Biological Diversity, Article 10 (c)-(d) and CoP Decision VII/16, paragraphs 21 and
25
25
Vth IUCN World Parks Congress, The Durban Action Plan, Outcome 5 and Recommendation 27 on Mobile
Indigenous Peoples and Conservation and its paragraphs 3 a, b, e and f
WORKING PAPER 39
requires the free prior informed consent of affected indigenous and local communities; recognition of
customary systems of land tenure’27. Thus the structures of traditional/indigenous understanding and
governance of the local environment and its life should be sustained - also through ‘innovative and
equitable laws and policies for... strengthening incentives for community-based forest management’
as recommended by FAO Asia-Pacific Forestry Commission28. The Bill is in line with international
commitments and principles on Protected Areas, according to which Governments should support
‘indigenous and local communities ... in formulating their own’ approach for conserving the areas,
‘lands and waters traditionally occupied or used by them’.29 ‘Indigenous peoples, their lands, waters
and other resources have made a substantial contribution to the conservation of global ecosystems.
For this trend to continue... protected areas, future and present, should take into account... the interests
and needs of indigenous peoples’ and need ‘consent for and approval by indigenous peoples’. 30 ‘Most
of the remaining significant areas of high natural value on earth are inhabited by indigenous peoples.
This testifies to the efficacy of indigenous resource management systems’, ‘closely attuned to the
natural laws operating in local ecosystems’, ‘Compared with protected area managers, who control
about 6% of the world's land mass, indigenous peoples are the earth's most important stewards’31.
Tribal rights activists indeed argue that the proposed cut-off date in the Bill of 1980 and the land
ceiling of 2.5 acres do not go far enough. They argue further that conservation critics ‘ignore the
millennia of peaceful tribal-forest coexistence, choosing to maintain that their very presence will
automatically degrade the habitat of the tiger and other wildlife leading to their extinction’. ‘Local
indigenous forest communities are the most experienced in terms of what kind of human relation to
local forest ecosystems can sustain the forest regeneration for centuries. They are thus duly more
competent and accountable on how the local forest can be sustainably used and conserved in practice -
rather than such modern authority of forest management, which has led to recent degeneration. As
modern administration has led to rapid forest degradation, it has not acted competently for conserving
the forest and cannot be accountably authorised to displace or restrict the more sustainable indigenous
forest life and forest relation of the indigenous local communities. The forest communities are more
accountable to save their forests - as their homes and unique sources of their life and culture - than
such managers for whom the forests are rather resources to be exchanged to commercial value’. They
argue further that tigers also have been able to judge their habitat to survive best in the forest areas of
indigenous people - relatively near to their living places - while the expansion of other forms of
settlement (agricultural, urban, etc.) or forest plantations have led to the vanishing of the tiger. The
26
UN Convention on the Biological Diversity, Article 8 (j) and CoP Decision VII/16, section H and Annex on
Sui Generis systems, paragraphs 2-5
27 CoP Decision VI/10 on article 8(j) and related provisions, paragraph 41 and Annex 1, paragraph 2
28
FAO 2006/09
29
CoP Decision VII/16,Annex on Akwé: Kon Voluntary Guidelines, paragraphs 10 a and 12
30
Vth IUCN World Parks Congress, Recommendation 5.24, Indigenous Peoples and Protected Areas
31
WWF Statement of Principles on Indigenous Peoples and Conservation, preamble and paragraphs 1-2 and 6-8
40 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
recently published most comprehensive new tiger research made it also very clear that ‘translocation
of local people out of protected area (displacement/evictions) has been one of the most inefficient
measures or tiger protection, together with establishment of "new/upgraded protected area" or tiger
"habitat restoration" or enhancement, "captive breeding facility" or "reintroduction of tigers". "Large
commercial plantations have replaced a lot of tiger habitat"’.32
When indigenous forest dwellers are displaced from the forest by modern forest management, the life
and work to which the forest dwellers are brought (to towns, to modern settled agriculture or
industries) are more forest-degrading than their indigenous forest life. To protect biodiversity and its
sustainable use by restrictions, one should assess how to begin restricting those rights and facilities
which are most biodiversity degrading in the long-term, such as the practices and facilities of city-life,
industry or settled agriculture, as well as how people can live with the regeneration of the forest,
rather than by eliminating the forest through modern habitation, cultivation, industry, etc. Evidence
over the years show that the more the forests have been transferred away from the indigenous forest
peoples - by modern commercial forest management, settled agriculture, urban habitation, industry,
tourism, etc, - the greater their degradation. This would widely displace indigenous forest dwellers
forcing them thus often to more urban life, to settled agriculture or industries, which are highly
unsustainable compared to the indigenous forest life and:
- Criminalise sustainable forest livelihoods developed over the last 26 years and legitimize massive
displacement of the most vulnerable, who have lived sustainably mobile indigenous forest life
(gathering forest produce, shifting cultivation or other relatively mobile subsistence).
- Remove the sustainable mobility of indigenous forest life and limit the rights of tribal forest life to a
given practice of ownership, commerce orientation and other modern dictates - which have been
shown to have a destabilising effect on the carrying capacity of ecosystems and lead to more serious
forest degradation.
It is laudable that the Indian government and Parliament have displayed courage in openly accepting
the enormous historical injustices meted to tribal people by depriving them of their traditional rights
to forest resources that are critical to their survival. At the same time we need to preserve forests for
the sake of indigenous people themselves as well as the rest of the world, for inter-species and inter-
generational equity. On the one hand, we need to recognize the needs to preserve small ecologically
significant land stretches from human interface. However on the other hand, we must not allow the
present Bill be trapped in half-hearted technicalities – but go as far as necessary to support forest
based survival, shelter and livelihoods of traditional forest dwellers built around forest wealth and
lands, and promote sustainable and democratic modes of forest usufruct, protection and development.
32
See for example ‘Technical Report’ at http://www.worldwildlife.org/tigers/pubs.cfm
WORKING PAPER 41
Conclusion
In conclusion, darkness continues to prevail in the arena of tribal policy in India. Protective laws are
rarely implemented, budgetary measures like the TSP strategy have failed to achieve genuine financial
devolution, and educational strategies have been assimilative and destructive of the moorings of tribal
culture. Light at the end of the tunnel can be seen only in the form of a powerful and radical recent law,
that provides for self-governance by tribal communities. However, so far, the state has forgotten or
subverted the interpretation of its own laws. The perils of tribal identity and survival remain as real as
ever.
42 TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN INDIA
REFERENCES
Anand, Sanjay (1993). Structures and Processes of Stratification in Tribal India. Unpublished
manuscript.
—— (1995). Tribal Identities and Movements in India: A Conceptual Exploration. Dissertation
submitted to the University of Delhi. New Delhi: Delhi School of Economics.
—— (1996). Nominal Christians & Authentic Tribals: Conversion and the Negotiation of Identity in
19th Century Chotanagpur. Unpublished manuscript.
Centre for Environment and Food Security (2005). Political Economy of Hunger in Adivasi Areas, New
Delhi: CEFS.
Chaudhuri, Buddhadeb (ed.) (1990). Tribal Transformation in India: Socio-Economic and Ecological
Development. New Delhi: Inter-India Publications.
Committee of Concerned Citizens (1998). Expanding Democratic Space.
Department for International Development (1999). India: Country Strategy Paper, Department of
International Development.
Elwin, Verrier (1939). ‘The Baiga’ in Ramachandra Guha (ed.) Social Ecology (1994). New Delhi:
Oxford University Press.
Government of India (1998). Annual Report 1997-98. Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment,
New Delhi: Government of India.
——— (1999). Annual Report 1998-99. Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, New Delhi:
Government of India.
Guha, Ramachandra (1999). Savaging the Civilized: Verrier Elwin, his Tribals and India. New Delhi:
Oxford University Press.
Mander, Harsh (forthcoming). Interventions for SC & ST Development: Experience of Madhya Pradesh.
——— (forthcoming) Tribal Land Alienation in Madhya Pradesh: A Brief Review of the Problem and
the Efficacy of Legislative Remedies.
——— and Vasundhara Naik (1999). Gram Sabhas and the Delivery of Justice. Paper presented at
the Workshop on The Role of the Gram Sabha in the Control over MFP and the Delivery of Justice,
held on 20th August, 1999 at UNDP, New Delhi.
Planning Commission (2000). Empowering Tribals of India: A Discussion Paper. (Mimeo)
Ratha, S.N. (1990). ‘Tribal Development: A Peep into the Problems, the Philosophy and the
Programme’ in Chaudhuri, Buddhadeb (ed.) Tribal Transformation in India: Socio-Economic
and Ecological Development. New Delhi: Inter-India Publications.
Raza, M. and A. Ahmad (1990). An Atlas of Tribal India. New Delhi: Concept Publishers.
WORKING PAPER 43
Roy Burman, B.K. (1990). ‘Issues in Tribal Development’ in Chaudhuri, Buddhadeb (ed.) Tribal
Transformation in India: Socio-Economic and Ecological Development. New Delhi: Inter-India
Publications.
——— (2000). ‘The indigenous peoples and the problem of human rights’ in Seminar-cum-Workshop
on Human Rights, held on February 28, 2000 in the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of
Administration, Mussoorie.
Savyasaachi (1998). Tribal Forest-Dwellers and Self-Rule: The Constituent Assembly Debates on the
Fifth and Sixth Schedules. New Delhi: Indian Social Institute.
Saxena, N.C. (1996). ‘Policy and Legal Reforms for the Poor in India’. Monograph Series, No. 1,
Mussourie: LBSNAA.
Shah, Ghanshyam (1990). ‘Tribal Issues: Problems and Perspectives’ in Chaudhuri, Buddhadeb (ed.)
Tribal Transformation in India: Socio-Economic and Ecological Development. New Delhi:
Inter-India Publications.
Shah, Mihir, Debashis Banerji, P.S. Vijayshankar and Pramathesh Ambasta (1998) Indian Drylands:
Tribal Societies and Development through Environmental Regeneration. New Delhi: Oxford
University Press.
Sharma, B.D. (1995). Whither Tribal Areas? Constitutional Amendments and After. New Delhi: Sahyog
Pustak Kutir.
Srivastava, K.B. (1999). Panchayats in Scheduled Areas: An Analysis of Provisions of the Panchayats
(Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (Central Act No. 40) and Extent of its Adaptation by the
States having Fifth Schedule Areas. Hyderabad: National Institute of Rural Development.
Stilden, Sile et al (ed). (2006). The Indigenous World. Coppenhagen: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri.
Vyas, N. N. and R.S. Mann (ed.) (1980). Indian Tribes in Transition. Jaipur-New Delhi: Rawat
Publications.