Context:
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The persistence of Maoist insurgency in central and eastern India is deeply rooted in long-standing governance failures in tribal-dominated regions.
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Despite constitutional safeguards under the Fifth Schedule, adivasi communities continue to face alienation, exploitation, and dispossession, creating fertile ground for insurgent mobilization.
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The article argues that India’s governance challenge is not merely security-related, but structural and constitutional in nature.
Key Highlights:
Governance Failure in Fifth Schedule Areas
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Fifth Schedule regions were envisioned as a social contract to protect adivasi autonomy and resources.
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However, poor implementation and neglect have resulted in:
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Persistent underdevelopment
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Discrimination and exploitation
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Low socio-economic indicators
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Maoist Growth Linked to Alienation
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Maoist movement expanded in the 1990s and early 2000s, driven by:
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Poverty and lack of services
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Land alienation
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State absence in governance delivery
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Two-Pronged State Approach
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The Indian state has adopted a combined strategy of:
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Security operations
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Development interventions
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Yet governance deficits have limited the effectiveness of this approach.
Land Dispossession and Liberalization Impact
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Despite legal safeguards, millions of tribals have been dispossessed due to:
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Arbitrary land acquisition
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Mining and industrial projects
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Post-liberalization resource extraction
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Administrative Alienation
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Absence of locals in administration implementing Fifth Schedule provisions has deepened distrust.
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Apex bodies meant to protect tribal rights have failed to prevent exploitation.
Weakening of Tribal Self-Governance Laws
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PESA (1996) was designed to strengthen tribal self-rule through Gram Sabhas.
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Violations, especially in land acquisition, have undermined its purpose.
Forest Rights and Livelihood Concerns
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FRA faces dilution, weakening forest dwellers’ entitlements.
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CAF Act (2016) impacts forest livelihoods by altering control over compensatory afforestation funds.
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Resistance to PESA is strongest in Maoist-affected areas like Chhattisgarh.
Alternative Governance Vision
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A post-Maoist governance model could learn from the Sixth Schedule, which provides stronger autonomous councils and political representation for tribal communities.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Maoism is linked to governance deficit + tribal alienation, not only ideology.
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Fifth Schedule provides special administration for Scheduled Areas but suffers from poor execution.
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PESA Act (1996) extends Panchayati Raj to Scheduled Areas, empowering Gram Sabhas.
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FRA ensures forest rights of tribal and forest-dwelling communities.
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CAF Act (2016) affects forest governance and livelihoods through compensatory afforestation mechanisms.
Benefits + Challenges + Impact
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Benefit of stronger governance: reduces insurgency appeal and ensures tribal justice.
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Challenges: under-representation of locals, weak enforcement, resistance from extractive interests.
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Impact: Continued alienation fuels insecurity and undermines constitutional promises.
Relevant Mains Points:
Governance and Social Justice Dimensions
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Maoist insurgency reflects failure of the state to uphold constitutional protections for adivasis.
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Tribal regions remain politically low-priority despite being resource-rich.
Structural Issues
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Key governance bottlenecks include:
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Lack of tribal representation in administration
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Weak accountability of apex bodies
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Dispossession through development projects
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Internal Security Linkages
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Maoism is sustained when governance is absent and communities lose faith in institutions.
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Security-centric responses cannot succeed without justice-based governance reforms.
Way Forward
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Strengthen Fifth Schedule governance through:
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Greater tribal participation in administration
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Effective implementation of PESA and FRA
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Transparent land acquisition with Gram Sabha consent
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Use digital technology to improve service delivery, but address structural exclusion first.
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Consider Sixth Schedule-like autonomous councils to ensure meaningful self-governance.
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Balance development with rights, livelihood security, and dignity of tribal communities.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2 (Governance): Fifth Schedule administration, PESA implementation, service delivery gaps
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GS 1 (Indian Society): Tribal alienation, displacement, social justice
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GS 3 (Internal Security): Maoism, insurgency drivers, governance-security nexus
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GS 1 (Post-Independence India): Evolution of tribal policy and internal conflict zones
