Content
- A Court order that was barking up the wrong tree
- Reforming the “Steel Frame” for India’s Deep-Tech Ambition
A Court order that was barking up the wrong tree
What happened (timeline & scope)
- Aug 11, 2025: SC directed Delhi civic bodies to capture 5,000 strays from “high-risk areas” for sheltering. Triggered concerns over legality, feasibility, and public health. Delhi’s street-dog population estimated at 0.5–1.0 million.
- Aug 22, 2025 (modified order): SC reversed course—dogs to be sterilised, vaccinated, dewormed, and returned to original localities. Only rabid/aggressive dogs to stay in shelters. Designated feeding zones mandated. Final hearing pending.
Relevance : GS 2(Governance , Judiciary)
Practice Question : “The Supreme Court’s recent directions on Delhi’s street dogs highlight the tension between legality, feasibility, and public health. In this context, examine the evidence-based pathway for humane and effective rabies control in India.” (250 words)
First principles: what works for public health & safety
- Rabies control depends on 70%+ vaccination coverage, not mass sheltering/culling.
- National Action Plan for Dog-Mediated Rabies Elimination (NAPRE) emphasises mass dog vaccination + Animal Birth Control (ABC).
- Vacuum effect: Removing dogs leads to immigration/reproduction → problem recurs.
- Best practice: Capture–Neuter–Vaccinate–Return (CNVR) + waste control.
- Evidence:
- Jaipur (1996–2000s): ABC + vaccination cut human rabies deaths to near-zero; stabilised dog population.
- Jodhpur (2005–09): CNVR reduced fertility, increased vaccination coverage.
Why mass shelters are high-risk, low-yield
- Epidemiological risk: Dense confinement = outbreaks (distemper, parvo, leptospirosis, rabies). Disposal & biosecurity challenges.
- Operational infeasibility: 5,000-dog capture target lacked basis; no updated census; past sterilisation coverage incomplete.
- Public safety: Removing stable, vaccinated packs increases territorial churn → more conflict.
Current legal position
- Law: PCA Act, 1960 + ABC Rules, 2023 → capture only for sterilisation/vaccination; return mandatory; exceptions only for rabid/aggressive dogs.
- SC 2024 precedent: Compassionate, rules-compliant ABC mandated; indiscriminate removal rejected.
- Aug 22, 2025 order: Realigns with ABC Rules → sterilise, vaccinate, return, feeding zones, no blanket sheltering.
Delhi problem in numbers
- Dog bites: ~3.7 million nationwide; ~25,000 in Delhi (2024). Solvable via vaccination + Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) + ABC.
- No fresh census: Last citywide count 2009; zone-wise 2016. Current estimates: 0.5–1.0 million → planning blind spot.
- Sterilisation throughput: Recent rise but still insufficient to hit ≥70% female sterilisation; without census targets, results weak.
Evidence-based plan for Delhi
A. Measure (0–3 months):
- Rapid photographic census ward-wise.
- One-Health dashboard (census, sterilisation, vaccination, bites, PEP stocks).
B. Vaccinate (1–12 months):
- Mass parenteral vaccination to achieve ≥70% per ward.
- Ring-vaccinate hotspots; repeat annually.
- Ensure 24×7 PEP supply & reporting.
C. Fertility control (1–24 months):
- Scale CNVR via fixed & mobile camps.
- Target ≥70% female sterilisation; microchip & ear-notch.
- Prioritise high-fecundity clusters (markets, waste hubs, peri-urban).
D. Environmental levers (0–12 months):
- Contain food waste at mandis/hotels; fines for dumping.
E. Human–dog interface (1–6 months):
- Designated feeding points with signage & feeder codes.
- Humane handling SOPs; helplines for escalation.
F. Risk management:
- Capture & quarantine aggressive/rabid dogs per protocol.
- Shelters = quarantine/clinical nodes, not long-term storage.
G. Governance & accountability:
- Monthly ward scorecards (vaccination %, sterilisation %, bite incidence).
- NGO payments tied to verified outcomes.
- Independent audit of ABC centres.
Common misconceptions cleared
- “Shelter all dogs = safer streets” → false; increases conflict & disease.
- “Culling is faster” → false; only 70% vaccination ensures control.
- “Feeding causes bites” → unmanaged feeding risky; designated feeding + CNVR reduces conflict.
What to watch before final adjudication
- Ensure uniform protocol under ABC Rules, 2023.
- Define “aggressive” clearly to avoid misuse.
- Mandate census + ward-wise coverage targets with dashboards & audits.
Glossary
- ABC: Animal Birth Control (sterilise + vaccinate + return).
- CNVR: Capture–Neuter–Vaccinate–Return.
- NAPRE: India’s roadmap to eliminate dog-mediated rabies by 2030.
- WHO/WOAH: Global technical guidance bodies.
- ICAM: Humane dog-population management coalition.
- MCD/NDMC: Delhi civic bodies.
Bottom line
- Aug 22, 2025 SC modification restores scientifically sound, legally compliant strategy: sterilise, vaccinate, return.
- Key task ahead: census-based targeting, high-throughput CNVR, mass vaccination, waste control, transparent metrics.
- Not the solution: indiscriminate warehousing of dogs.
Reforming the “Steel Frame” for India’s Deep-Tech Ambition
What is the “Steel Frame” and why it matters for deep-tech
- “Steel frame” = Colonial-era administrative architecture (ICS → IAS/IPS and allied services).
- Designed for control, compliance, and revenue/security—not for innovation or risk-taking.
- Deep-tech (AI, semiconductors, quantum, space, defence, biotech, robotics, advanced materials) requires:
- Speed, specialised talent, risk capital
- Agile procurement and predictable regulation
- Strong IP protection and dispute resolution mechanisms
- Hence, state capacity in regulation, funding, procurement, and partnerships will decide success of Viksit Bharat 2047.
Relevance: GS 2 (Governance)
Practice Question : Reforming India’s “steel frame” is no longer about efficiency but about survival in a deep-tech world. Discuss the key administrative reforms needed to align India’s bureaucracy with its deep-tech ambitions for Viksit Bharat 2047. (250 words)
Core Friction Points
- Generalist dominance in techno-bureaucratic posts; weak domain depth.
- Tenure volatility → risk aversion, loss of institutional memory.
- Rule-centric compliance → audit phobia, secrecy ethos, slow iteration.
- Procurement rigidities → L-1 price bias, no agile/prototype contracts.
- Regulatory fragmentation across AI, telecom, space, biotech, defence.
- Weak project finance plumbing → slow disbursals, limited advance payments.
- Limited public demand-pull → govt not acting as anchor customer for frontier tech.
- Talent pipeline gaps → sparse lateral entry, poor pay for PhDs/industry experts.
- Centre–State–Local frictions → land, clearances, inspectorates cause delays.
- Adjudication delays in IPR/contracts → high cost of capital, stalled innovation.
What Has Improved
- Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): Aadhaar, UPI, ONDC, ABDM prove scale capability.
- Space & defence reforms: IN-SPACe, iDEX/Make-I/II, test ranges crowd in startups.
- Decriminalisation & compliance pruning in some sectors.
- Mission-mode programmes: Semiconductor Mission, AI initiatives, PLI schemes.
First Principles for a 2047-Ready Administrative State
- Prioritise outcomes > procedures; risk-managed agility over zero-risk stagnation.
- Specialisation for deep-tech posts; generalists only for coordination.
- Predictability & speed as legal entitlements (time-bound approvals).
- Government as anchor buyer to shape markets and standards.
- Transparent, data-rich governance to reduce discretion and increase accountability.
Reform Blueprint — 12 Levers
- Talent & Cadre Architecture → specialist services, lateral entry, stable tenure.
- Mission Karmayogi 2.0 → deep-tech training, certifications for promotions.
- Procurement for Innovation → new procurement code, TRL-linked milestones, PCP Fund.
- Regulatory Design → sandbox-based, harmonised standards, single gateway.
- Time-bound Clearances → SLA clocks, deemed approvals, green lanes.
- Anchor Demand → mandatory innovation procurement, annual deep-tech demand plans.
- Finance & Grants Plumbing → milestone-based disbursal, IP-backed lending, credit guarantees.
- IPR & Adjudication Speed → fast-track benches, Bayh-Dole style clarity.
- Audit & Accountability Reform → ex-post audits, protection from audit fear.
- Centre–State Compact → GST Council-like innovation council, performance-linked grants.
- Institutional Separation → distinct roles for policy, regulation, and operations.
- Open Government & Metrics → dashboards, league tables, annual governance reports.
Safeguards
- Rule of law & due process (speed with documentation, not discretion).
- Neutrality of civil service (avoid politicisation while enabling expertise).
- Privacy & national security compliance in sandboxes/DPI.
- Competition policy → avoid vendor lock-in, prefer open standards.
Measuring Success
- Time for approvals, procurement, grant disbursal.
- Share of innovation procurement in govt spend.
- Patent & dispute resolution timelines.
- Number of lateral hires/domain specialists.
- Public financing & scale-up success rate of deep-tech startups.
- High-tech manufacturing GVA share; GERD/GDP and BERD/GDP growth.
- Export share of high-tech goods/services.
Quick Wins (0–12 months)
- Notify procurement code + launch PCP Fund.
- Publish demand plans of 10 ministries with sandbox windows.
- Convert 100+ techno-reg posts into specialist tracks.
- Statutory SLAs for top approvals; public dashboard.
- IPR fast-track benches; pilot IP-backed lending.
Medium Horizon (1–3 years)
- Establish National Innovation & Industrial Permits Council.
- Scale Mission Karmayogi Deep-Tech.
- Build national testbeds (AI safety, 6G, biotech BSL-3/4, space components).
- Operationalise regulatory convergence cells.
Long Horizon (3–7 years)
- Mature specialist cadres, 10% posts lateral/specialist.
- Audit reform into statute.
- Resolve IPR disputes within 12 months median.
- Institutionalise annual innovation procurement targets.
Bottom Line
- India’s deep-tech ambition hinges on administrative design.
- Reforming the steel frame is not just “cutting red tape” but re-platforming the state.
- Specialist talent, agile procurement, sandboxed regulation, anchor demand, fast adjudication, and measurable accountability are essential for Viksit Bharat 2047.