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PESA Act Implemented in Jharkhand after 25 Years

Context & Why in News ?

  • Panchayat (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act rules notified in Jharkhand in 2025–26, 25 years after statehood.
  • Applies fully in 13 districts, partially in 3.
  • Reignites debate on Gram Sabha supremacy, customary law, and administrative control in Fifth Schedule Areas.

Relevance

GS II – Polity & Governance

  • Fifth Schedule
  • Tribal self-governance
  • Panchayati Raj in Scheduled Areas

GS I – Indian Society

  • Tribal autonomy & customary law

Constitutional / Legal Dimension

  • Fifth Schedule (Article 244):
    • Mandates special governance for Scheduled Areas to protect tribal autonomy.
  • PESA, 1996:
    • Extends Part IX (Panchayats) to Scheduled Areas with modifications.
    • Core spirit: Gram Sabha as basic unit of self-governance.
  • Key Constitutional Anchors:
    • Article 13 (customary law protection via PESA).
    • Articles 38, 39(b): distributive justice, community control over resources.
  • Fault Line:
    • Jharkhand rules alleged to dilute Sections 4(a), 4(d) of PESA → erosion of protection to customary law, cultural identity, community ownership.

Governance & Administrative Dimension

  • What the Rules Provide:
    • Gram Sabha declared “supreme” in Scheduled Areas.
    • President chosen as per traditional customs.
    • Powers over:
      • Minor minerals, forest produce, small water bodies.
      • Local dispute resolution; fines up to ₹2,000.
  • Critical Governance Concerns:
    • District Deputy Commissioner:
      • Recognises and notifies Gram Sabhas and boundaries → top-down control.
    • Gram Sabha excluded from:
      • District Mineral Foundation (DMF).
      • Tribal Sub Plan (TSP).
  • Institutional Tension:
    • Panchayati Raj Institutions + bureaucracy vs customary institutions (Manki-Munda, Majhi-Pargana).

Economic & Resource Governance Dimension

  • Resource-rich State:
    • ~30% forest cover.
    • ~40% of India’s mineral reserves.
    • Annual mineral output: ~160 million tonnes.
  • Disconnect:
    • High resource extraction vs persistent tribal poverty.
  • Key Issue:
    • Gram Sabha authority limited to minor minerals, not major mining, DMF funds, or consent mechanisms.

Social & Human Development Dimension

  • Demographic Reality:
    • STs = 26.3% of population (~32.9 million).
    • 32 tribal communities; 8 PVTGs.
  • Persistent Deprivation:
    • Literacy (STs): 57.2% (2011).
    • Only 6.08% tribal households in salaried jobs.
  • Health Indicators:
    • 28% tribal women with BMI < 18.5 (NFHS-5).
    • High anaemia, malaria burden.
  • Water & Welfare:
    • Jal Jeevan Mission coverage: ~55%, tribal areas lagging.

Environment & Forest Rights Dimension

  • Forest Rights Act (FRA) Interface:
    • 110,756 claims filed; only ~56% approved by Aug 2025.
  • Civil Society Concern:
    • Jharkhand Forest Rights Forum alleges:
      • Bureaucratic dominance.
      • Community forest management rights diluted.
  • Structural Issue:
    • PESA + FRA not harmonised in rules → fragmented tribal governance.

Criticisms

Institutional

  • Gram Sabha authority conditional on administrative recognition.
  • Weak linkage with DMF, TSP, major development planning.

Legal

  • Omission of explicit terms like community ownership.
  • Customary law subordinated to executive discretion.

Implementation

  • Risk of symbolic decentralisation.
  • Panchayat secretaries and officials can override traditional institutions.

Ethical

  • Violates principle of self-rule as intrinsic tribal right, not state concession.

Way Forward

  • Amend Rules to fully mirror PESA Section 4:
    • Explicit protection to customary law, culture, community ownership.
  • Gram Sabha Primacy:
    • Recognition by community, not district officials.
  • Expand Economic Powers:
    • Mandatory Gram Sabha consent for DMF utilisation, major mining impacts.
  • PESAFRA Convergence Framework:
    • Single institutional platform for forest and village governance.
  • Capacity Building:
    • Legal literacy, financial powers, independent dispute resolution.
  • Governors Fifth Schedule Role:
    • Active use of discretionary powers to safeguard tribal interests.

Prelims Pointers

  • PESA applies only to Fifth Schedule Areas, not Sixth Schedule.
  • Jharkhand: last major Fifth Schedule state to notify PESA rules.
  • Gram Sabha under PESA ≠ Gram Sabha under normal Panchayati Raj.
  • Customary law protection is core to PESA, not optional.

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