Tribal Societies in India — UPSC Notes

GS Paper I · Indian Society & Polity
By Legacy IAS Content Team  ·  May 2026

Tribal Societies in India —
Definition, Features & Challenges

A comprehensive UPSC guide to tribal societies in India — definition, nomenclatures (Adivasis, STs, PVTGs, DNTs), characteristics, contributions, Fifth and Sixth Schedules, Forest Rights Act 2006, PM JANMAN scheme (₹24,104 crore, November 2023), Manipur ethnic conflict (2023–25), Great Nicobar Island project FRA challenges (2024–26), NCRB 2023 data on ST atrocities, PYQs, probable questions, and FAQs. All data verified against current sources.

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Legacy IAS Content Team UPSC Expert Faculty · Legacy IAS Academy, Bangalore
8.9%Tribal population — India (Census 2011, 10.4 crore)
75PVTGs across 18 states and 1 UT (Andaman & Nicobar)
₹24,104CrPM JANMAN scheme for PVTG development (2023–26)
3,399ST atrocity cases in Manipur alone — NCRB 2023
Definition & Taxonomy

Tribal Communities in India —
Definitions & Nomenclatures

According to the Imperial Gazetteer of India, a tribe is a collection of families bearing a common name, speaking a common dialect, and occupying or professing to occupy a common territory. India is known as a melting pot of tribes and races. After Africa, India has the second-largest concentration of tribal population in the world.

As per the 2011 Census, the tribal population constitutes about 8.9% of India's total population — approximately 10.4 crore people. Tribal communities in India are referred to by multiple nomenclatures — each with distinct connotations, constitutional status, and policy implications.

UPSC Angle: Tribal societies appear across GS Paper-I (Indian Society — features, integration challenges), GS Paper-II (Fifth/Sixth Schedules, PESA, Forest Rights Act, welfare schemes), GS Paper-III (environment — FRA and conservation), and Internal Security (insurgency in North-East, Manipur). PM JANMAN (₹24,104 crore, November 2023), Manipur ethnic conflict (2023–25), and the Great Nicobar Island FRA challenge (2024–26) are critical current affairs for Mains 2026.
NomenclatureMeaning / DefinitionConstitutional / Legal Basis
AdivasiLiterally 'original inhabitants' — refers to the indigenous population of India with distinct cultures, languages, and ecology-based livelihoods. Emphasises historical prior inhabitation and indigenous rights claims.Not in Constitution; widely used in public discourse and civil society; UN Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) is relevant framework
Scheduled Tribes (STs)Constitutional designation — "such tribes or tribal communities...as are deemed under Article 342 to be Scheduled Tribes." Criteria: primitive traits, geographical isolation, distinct culture, shy of contact with mainstream community, economically backward.Article 366(25) + Article 342 (Presidential specification). SC constitutes 8.6% of population; ST 8.9% (Census 2011).
Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs)Most disadvantaged and marginalised tribal communities — 75 groups across 18 states + 1 UT. On the verge of extinction. Criteria: pre-agricultural technology, low literacy, declining population, economic backwardness. Total PVTG population ~17 lakh (Census 2011).Created in 1975 following Dhebar Commission (1973); renamed from PTGs (Primitive Tribal Groups) to PVTGs. PM JANMAN scheme (₹24,104 crore, 2023–26) specifically targets PVTGs.
Forest DwellersCommunities that live in and around forested areas, dependent on forests for livelihood — hunting, gathering, agriculture, pastoralism, Minor Forest Produce (MFP).Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 — Forest Rights Act (FRA). Recognises 2.2 million IFR and 102,889 CFR in 15 years.
Denotified Tribes (DNTs)Communities once labelled "habitually criminal" under the British Criminal Tribes Act (CTA) 1871. Repealed in 1952 — "denotified" — but face persistent discrimination, police harassment, and social stigma. Approximately 1,500 DNT communities with ~10-12 crore people.CTA repealed 1952; many states have Habitual Offenders Acts replacing CTA. Idate Commission (2008) recommended inclusion in OBC/SC/ST lists. National Commission for Denotified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (NCDNT) constituted.
Nomadic/Semi-nomadicCommunities that move seasonally with herds or for trade, agriculture, and resources. Examples: Banjara, Lambadi, Raika, Rabari, Gaddi. Excluded from settled welfare systems — no fixed address, no ration card, no school enrolment.No specific constitutional designation. Covered under OBC/ST policies where applicable. ONORC (One Nation One Ration Card) partially addresses portability of welfare for nomadic communities.
Most Vulnerable

Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups
(PVTGs) in India

PVTGs represent the most endangered communities in India — on the verge of extinction, with declining populations, minimal technology, and limited contact with mainstream society. They receive the highest tier of protection and priority in tribal welfare policy.

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Key Facts About PVTGs

75 PVTGs across 18 states and 1 UT (Andaman and Nicobar Islands). Total PVTG population approximately 17 lakh (Census 2011). Created following Dhebar Commission (1973) recommendations — originally called Primitive Tribal Groups (PTGs), renamed PVTGs. Identification criteria: pre-agricultural technology; low literacy; economic backwardness; declining or stagnant population.

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Andaman & Nicobar PVTGs

Great Andamanese, Jarawa, Onge, Sentinelese, and Shompen are the Andaman and Nicobar PVTGs — the most isolated tribal communities on Earth. The Sentinelese of North Sentinel Island are completely uncontacted (estimated 50-150 people) — with Indian law prohibiting approach within 3 nautical miles. The Shompen of Great Nicobar (~229 people) are at the centre of the ₹81,000 crore Great Nicobar Project controversy (2024–26).

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Notable PVTGs — Mainland India

Odisha: Birhor, Bonda, Dongria Kondh (famous for resistance to Vedanta mining project — Niyamgiri Hills). Gujarat: Kathodi, Padhar. West Bengal: Birhor, Lodas, Totos. Tripura: Reangs. Karnataka: Jenu Kuruba, Koraga. The Bonda tribe of Odisha — one of the world's oldest tribes — practices shifting cultivation and maintains one of India's most distinct traditional cultures.

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PM JANMAN — ₹24,104 Crore (2023–26)

PM Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan (PM JANMAN) was launched on November 15, 2023 (Janjatiya Gaurav Divas). ₹24,104 crore (Central: ₹15,336 crore; State: ₹8,768 crore) for PVTG development. 11 critical interventions via 9 ministries: 6 lakh+ pucca houses completed; 3,000+ mobile tower habitations; 1,900 km link roads built; 750 Mobile Medical Units operational. Target: saturate all PVTG habitations with basic facilities by 2026.

Distinctiveness

How Tribes Differ from
Mainstream Society

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Distinct Cultural Practices

Tribal communities have unique cultures, languages, and customs. Warli tribe (Maharashtra): distinct art form — geometric patterns on mud walls using rice paste during festivals. Gond tribe (MP, Chhattisgarh): elaborate Gond painting tradition depicting nature and mythology. Tribal languages number approximately 700+ — many endangered as younger generations shift to dominant languages.

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Forest-Based Economic Practices

Tribal communities traditionally depend on natural resources — agriculture, hunting, gathering, fishing, and Minor Forest Produce (MFP). Bonda tribe of Odisha: depends on forest for livelihood — practices shifting cultivation (jhum) and hunts wild animals. Chenchu tribe of Andhra Pradesh: conservation practices in the Nallamala Hills — protected forest and wildlife for generations. Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFP) like honey, medicinal plants, and bamboo are primary livelihoods for millions.

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Kinship-Based Social Organisation

Tribal communities are organised around kinship groups rather than centralised government. Traditional governance — village councils, customary law — is the primary social institution. Kondh tribe of Odisha: traditional village council "Gudi" responsible for decision-making and conflict resolution. PESA Act (1996) and Sixth Schedule Autonomous District Councils legally recognise tribal governance systems.

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Spiritual Connection to Land

Many tribes have a profound spiritual and cultural connection to their land — gods reside in forests, rivers, and hills. Bhils of Rajasthan: believe their gods reside in forests, hills, and rivers. Dongria Kondh: Niyamgiri Hills are sacred — home of their deity Niyam Raja (this was central to the Vedanta mining opposition). This spiritual-ecological relationship makes land alienation a cultural and existential crisis, not merely an economic one.

Value to India

Contributions of
Tribal Communities in India

Tribal communities are often discussed only as recipients of welfare — but their contributions to India's ecology, economy, culture, and democracy are profound and frequently overlooked.

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Environmental Conservation

Tribal communities are India's most effective forest conservers. The Chenchus of Andhra Pradesh have protected the Nallamala forest ecosystem for generations. Community Forest Rights (CFR) under FRA empower tribal communities to manage and protect forests — more effective than state-enforced conservation. Tribal territories host the majority of India's biodiversity-rich areas, tiger reserves, and wildlife sanctuaries.

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Economic Contribution

Tribal communities contribute to India's economy through agriculture, Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFP), handicrafts, and traditional skills. Gond tribe of MP: metal craft, painting, sculpture, farming, and shifting cultivation expertise. NTFP worth thousands of crores — honey, bamboo, mahua flowers, tendu leaves, medicinal plants — largely processed by tribal communities. Tribal handicrafts — Warli paintings, Dhokra metalwork, bamboo crafts — have global market value.

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Indigenous/Traditional Knowledge

Tribal communities possess vast traditional knowledge of ecosystems, medicinal plants, sustainable agriculture, and weather patterns. The Siddi tribe (of African descent, in Gujarat and Karnataka): extensive knowledge of medicinal plants now being studied by scientists. This traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is crucial for climate adaptation, biodiversity conservation, and sustainable development — and is protected under the Biological Diversity Act 2002 and FRA.

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Political Representation & Nation-Building

Tribal leaders have contributed to India's democracy and national development. Draupadi Murmu — first tribal woman President of India (2022–present); represents the Santali tribe from Odisha. Birsa Munda — tribal freedom fighter whose birth anniversary (November 15) is now Janjatiya Gaurav Divas. Tribal communities' democratic participation has strengthened India's federal democracy and brought marginalised voices into national governance.

Contemporary Challenges

Challenges Faced by
Tribal Communities in India

Tribal communities face a cluster of interconnected challenges — from historical land alienation to contemporary development displacement and institutional discrimination. Understanding these with specific data is essential for high-scoring UPSC Mains answers.

01

Land Alienation & Displacement

Development projects — dams, mines, highways, wildlife sanctuaries — have displaced tribal communities. India's development-displaced population since independence is estimated at 5-6 crore, with tribals constituting a disproportionate share (they are 8.9% of population but approximately 40% of all displaced). FRA (2006) recognised forest rights on 2.2 million IFR titles — but approximately 50% of claims filed have been rejected, leaving millions without recognised rights.

02

Violence and Atrocities — NCRB 2023

ST atrocity cases rose sharply — driven partly by the Manipur ethnic conflict where cases rose from just 1 in 2022 to 3,399 in 2023. States like Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan — historically high in tribal crimes — remain concerns. Cases include lynching, custodial torture, sexual violence, land dispossession, and social humiliation — often normalised in local contexts. Low conviction rates under the SC/ST Atrocities Act (~30-35%) reflect weak enforcement.

03

Poverty and Educational Deprivation

Nearly half of India's Scheduled Tribes remain below the poverty line, and they account for over a quarter of India's poorest people. Tribal literacy rates remain significantly below national averages — despite constitutional mandates and scheme investments. Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRS) programme aims to address this — 740 schools sanctioned, covering 3.5 lakh students. Scholarship schemes, pre-matric and post-matric, cover tribal students but reach and quality gaps remain.

04

Forest Rights Act Implementation Gaps

Despite the landmark FRA (2006), approximately 50% of claims (Individual Forest Rights) have been rejected — often without proper hearings. Community Forest Rights (CFR) recognition is even lower. The 2022 Forest Conservation Rules (MoEFCC) violated FRA by permitting forest diversion without Gram Sabha consent. The Great Nicobar Project (2022-2026) is the most visible current case of alleged FRA violations — no forest rights settled on GNI before clearance; Gram Sabha consent improperly obtained.

05

Health Crisis

Tribal communities have significantly higher infant and maternal mortality rates, malnutrition levels, and disease burdens compared to national averages. Sickle cell anaemia is endemic among tribal communities in central India — affecting approximately 20-30% of some tribal groups. PM JANMAN's 750 Mobile Medical Units (MMUs) address health access but doctor shortages and road connectivity remain barriers. Nutritional deficiencies drive tribal child malnutrition — POSHAN Abhiyan's tribal-specific components address this.

06

Ethnic Conflict & North-East Insurgency

The Manipur ethnic conflict (May 2023–ongoing) between Meitei and Kuki-Zo tribal communities — 250+ deaths, 60,000+ displaced — is one of India's most serious ethnic crises. Multiple North-East tribal insurgencies (Naga, Bodo, Mizo — partially resolved) reflect the complex intersection of tribal identity, land rights, religion, and governance. President's Rule imposed in Manipur (February 2025) following Chief Minister's resignation reflects the severity of governance breakdown.

Legal Framework

Constitutional & Legal Provisions
for Tribal Communities

ProvisionContentTribal Significance
Article 15, 16 (FR)Non-discrimination on grounds of caste, race, religion; equality of opportunity in public employmentProhibition of discrimination against tribal communities
Article 19(5)Reasonable restrictions on freedom of movement for protection of interests of any Scheduled TribeAllows inner line permits and tribal area restrictions to protect tribal communities from outsider encroachment
Article 23Prohibition of forced labour (begar)Addresses exploitation of tribal labour — historically common in bonded and forced labour forms
Article 46 (DPSP)Promote educational and economic interests of SCs, STs, and other weaker sectionsConstitutional mandate for tribal welfare schemes — Eklavya Schools, scholarships, PM JANMAN
Article 244(1) — Fifth ScheduleProvides for administration and control of Scheduled Areas (tribal-majority areas in states other than NE states)Governor has special responsibility; Tribes Advisory Council; PESA (1996) extends Gram Sabha powers; Governors can adapt laws for Scheduled Areas
Article 244(2) — Sixth ScheduleProvides for tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram through Autonomous District Councils (ADCs)ADCs have legislative, judicial, and executive powers over land management, forests, social customs, and certain criminal matters — strongest form of tribal self-governance
Article 330, 332Reservation of Lok Sabha and State Assembly seats for STsPolitical representation for STs — 47 Lok Sabha seats reserved for STs
Article 338ANational Commission for Scheduled TribesConstitutional oversight body monitoring ST welfare, safeguards, and rights
Article 342President specifies which tribes are Scheduled Tribes in each State — by public notification, after consultation with GovernorST status is state-specific; Meitei demand for ST status (which triggered Manipur conflict) would require Presidential notification
FRA 2006 — Section 3Recognition of Forest Rights — Individual Forest Rights, Community Forest Rights, Minor Forest Produce rights, Habitat Rights (Section 3(1)(e) for PVTGs)Most significant post-independence legislation for tribal land rights — redresses historical injustice of colonial forest policies
PESA Act 1996Panchayats Extension to Scheduled Areas — extends Gram Sabha powers to Fifth Schedule areasMandates mandatory Gram Sabha consent for land acquisition, mining, and project development in Scheduled Areas — implementation remains weak in most states
Fifth vs Sixth Schedule — Key Distinction: The Fifth Schedule (Art 244(1)) covers Scheduled Areas in mainland states (outside NE states) — gives power to Governors and Tribes Advisory Councils; executive protection. The Sixth Schedule (Art 244(2)) covers tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram — creates Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) with actual lawmaking powers. Sixth Schedule provides stronger tribal self-governance than Fifth Schedule. Both are directly tested in UPSC Prelims and Mains.
Policy Framework

Government Schemes for
Tribal Welfare in India

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PM JANMAN (2023–26) — ₹24,104 Crore

PM Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan — launched November 15, 2023 (Janjatiya Gaurav Divas). Targets 75 PVTGs across 18 states and 1 UT with 11 critical interventions by 9 ministries. Progress: 6 lakh+ pucca houses completed; 3,000+ mobile tower habitations; 1,900 km link roads; 750 Mobile Medical Units. First comprehensive, time-bound, multi-ministry PVTG saturation programme.

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Forest Rights Act (FRA) 2006

Recognises Individual Forest Rights (IFR), Community Forest Rights (CFR), Minor Forest Produce rights, and Habitat Rights for PVTGs. In 15 years: recognised 2.2 million IFR titles and 102,889 CFR titles covering 6.8 million hectares across 20 states (about 50.37% of claims received). Odisha first state to allocate separate budget (₹2,600 lakh, 2023) for FRA implementation.

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Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRS)

Residential schools for ST students in remote tribal areas — providing education comparable to Navodaya Vidyalayas. Target: 740 EMRS covering all blocks with ≥50% ST population and at least 20,000 tribal persons. Covers approximately 3.5 lakh students. National Fellowship Scheme, Pre-Matric and Post-Matric Scholarships, and Top Class Scholarships address tribal higher education.

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TRIFED & Van Dhan Vikas Kendras

Tribal Cooperative Marketing Development Federation of India (TRIFED) markets tribal Minor Forest Produce (MFP) at fair prices — eliminating middlemen exploitation. Van Dhan Vikas Kendras (VDVKs) — tribal enterprise hubs for primary processing and value addition of MFP. Pradhan Mantri Van Dhan Yojana: market linkages for tribal MFP collectors through ~3,000 Van Dhan SHGs.

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NAMASTE & Sickle Cell Anaemia Mission

National Mission to Eliminate Sickle Cell Anaemia by 2047 — targets tribal communities in central India where the disease is endemic. National Sickle Cell Anaemia Portal; universal screening of tribal populations. NAMASTE scheme (for sanitation) addresses manual scavenging in tribal areas. PM Adi Adarsh Gram Yojana (PMAAGY) develops tribal villages as model villages — targeting 40% of tribal population.

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Venture Capital Fund for STs (2024)

Ministry of Tribal Affairs launched the Venture Capital Fund for Scheduled Tribes in 2024 — providing financial assistance of ₹10 lakh to ₹5 crore to ST-promoted companies in manufacturing and services. Aims to build an entrepreneurial base among tribal youth and shift from subsistence economy to market-integrated livelihoods. Recognises that tribal economic empowerment requires capital access, not just skills.

Value Addition

Current Events Linked to
Tribal Societies in India — 2023–26

These events are directly testable in UPSC Mains 2026 — linking tribal issues to constitutional provisions, judicial developments, development-vs-rights tensions, and ethnic conflict.

November 15, 2023PM JANMAN Launched — ₹24,104 Crore for 75 PVTGs
PM JANMAN · PVTGs · Tribal Welfare

PM Modi launched the Pradhan Mantri Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan (PM JANMAN) on November 15, 2023 — Janjatiya Gaurav Divas (birth anniversary of tribal freedom fighter Birsa Munda). The scheme aims to saturate all 75 PVTG communities across 18 states and 1 UT with basic facilities by 2026 through 11 critical interventions by 9 line ministries. Total outlay: ₹24,104 crore (Central: ₹15,336 crore; State: ₹8,768 crore).

Progress (as of 2025-26): 6 lakh+ pucca houses completed; 3,000+ PVTG habitations covered with mobile towers; 1,900 km link roads built; 750 Mobile Medical Units operational. PM JANMAN is India's first comprehensive, time-bound, multi-ministry programme specifically targeting the 75 most vulnerable tribal communities — those at greatest risk of extinction due to stagnant or declining populations, pre-agricultural technology, and minimal contact with mainstream society. The biggest unresolved challenge remains the "identity-development conflict" — how to provide modern facilities without destroying the cultural integrity and relative isolation on which these tribes depend for survival.

May 2023 — ongoingManipur Ethnic Conflict — Meitei vs Kuki-Zo, 250+ Deaths, 60,000+ Displaced
Ethnic Conflict · ST Status Demand · Governance Failure

The Manipur ethnic conflict broke out in May 2023 between the predominantly Hindu, valley-based Meitei community (demanding Scheduled Tribe status) and the predominantly Christian, hill-based Kuki-Zo tribal communities (fearing loss of their land and job reservations if Meitei receive ST status). The violence has resulted in 250+ deaths, 60,000+ internally displaced, widespread village burnings, sexual violence, and destruction of places of worship.

Data: NCRB 2023 recorded 3,399 cases of crimes against STs in Manipur — compared to just 1 in 2022. The Supreme Court expressed concern over "absolute breakdown of law and order." Violence resumed even after the Chief Minister's resignation and President's Rule was imposed on February 13, 2025. The conflict illustrates: (1) the constitutional complexity of ST status determination (Article 342 — Presidential notification required); (2) the intersection of tribal land rights, ethnic identity, religion, and reservations as a volatile political configuration; (3) the governance vacuum in India's North-East when ethnic tensions escalate.

2024 — 2026Great Nicobar Project — FRA Violations, Shompen Tribal Rights at Stake
Forest Rights Act · PVTG · Development vs Rights

The ₹81,000 crore Great Nicobar Island (GNI) Project — comprising an integrated township, transshipment port, and dual-use military-civilian airport — threatens the survival of two tribes: the Shompen (a PVTG of approximately 229 people — largely uncontacted) and the Nicobarese. Approximately 130 sq km of Tribal Reserve was de-notified for the project (2022-2024). Calcutta High Court admitted a PIL in December 2024 challenging FRA violations (no forest rights settled before clearance; improper Gram Sabha consent).

Timeline of challenges: Nicobarese Tribal Council Chairman's 'NOC' was later withdrawn (November 2022); Tribal Council wrote to government alleging FRA violations (August 2025); Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi wrote to Minister Jual Oram (September 2025). National Green Tribunal cleared the project in April 2026 — but critics call it "top-down monitoring bypassing tribal Gram Sabha consent rights." The case embodies India's core development-tribal rights tension: state infrastructure interests vs FRA-protected community consent powers. Shompen Habitat Rights (Section 3(1)(e) FRA) are the highest tier of tribal land protection — making their potential displacement one of India's most serious indigenous rights cases.

2023–2025State Caste Surveys — Tribal Populations & Sub-Classification Debate
Caste Census · SC/ST Sub-classification · Davinder Singh 2024

The Supreme Court's landmark ruling in State of Punjab v. Davinder Singh (2024) upheld the constitutional validity of sub-classification within the SC/ST reservation quota — allowing states to create sub-categories within the ST list to target the most socially and educationally backward sub-groups. This enables states to address the problem of more developed tribes within the ST umbrella capturing most reservation benefits. Telangana's caste survey (completed in 50 days, 2024) found STs at 10.45% of population and implemented SC sub-categorisation.

Caste Census April 2025: The Union Cabinet approved including caste enumeration in Census 2027 — which will for the first time provide empirical data on OBC population. For tribal communities, the Census 2027 will also update ST population data (last counted in 2011 Census) — essential for determining which communities qualify for PVTG status, sub-classification needs, and welfare scheme targeting. The intersection of Caste Census 2027, Davinder Singh sub-classification ruling, and the PM JANMAN programme's PVTG focus represents the most complex matrix of tribal policy reform in decades.

Previous Year Questions

UPSC Mains PYQs
Tribal Societies in India

These are actual UPSC Mains questions on tribal societies, with approach notes calibrated to current data (PM JANMAN 2023, Manipur conflict 2023–25, Great Nicobar FRA 2024–26, Davinder Singh 2024 SC ruling).

2023GS Paper I15 Marks · 250 Words

Examine the main challenges faced by tribal communities in India. How has the Forest Rights Act (2006) addressed some of these challenges? What are its implementation gaps? (UPSC Mains 2023)

Approach: Challenges: land alienation; development displacement (~40% of displaced despite 8.9% population share); poverty (50% below poverty line); educational deprivation; health (sickle cell anaemia endemic); Manipur ethnic conflict (3,399 ST atrocity cases 2023). FRA achievements: 2.2 million IFR titles; 102,889 CFR titles; 6.8 million hectares; Odisha's separate budget allocation (2023). Implementation gaps: 50%+ claims rejected without proper hearings; CFR recognition weaker than IFR; 2022 Forest Conservation Rules violate FRA consent provisions; Great Nicobar Project FRA violations (2024–26). Way forward: mandatory Gram Sabha consent enforcement; special courts for FRA disputes; PVTG Habitat Rights protection.

2022GS Paper II15 Marks · 250 Words

Discuss the significance of the Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Indian Constitution for tribal governance and welfare. How effectively have they been implemented? (UPSC Mains 2022)

Approach: Fifth Schedule (Art 244(1)): Scheduled Areas in mainland states; Governor's special powers; Tribes Advisory Council; PESA 1996 (Gram Sabha powers including consent for land acquisition — weak implementation in most states). Sixth Schedule (Art 244(2)): Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram; Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) with lawmaking powers — strongest tribal self-governance. Implementation gaps: PESA not fully operationalised; Governors rarely exercise Fifth Schedule discretionary powers; ADCs under-resourced; Manipur conflict (2023-25) reflects failure of tribal governance structures. Constitutional anomaly: Meitei community's demand for ST status — Article 342 (Presidential notification); SC dismissed petitions; Manipur conflict erupted.

2021GS Paper III15 Marks · 250 Words

Discuss the development-displacement dilemma in tribal areas of India. How should India balance infrastructure development with tribal rights? (UPSC Mains 2021)

Approach: Dilemma: national development needs (dams, mines, highways) vs tribal land and livelihood rights. Historical: tribals ~40% of displaced despite 8.9% of population. FRA 2006 — Gram Sabha consent requirement (Section 4(5)). PESA 1996 — mandatory consent in 5th Schedule areas. Failed cases: Sardar Sarovar (Narmada), mining in Niyamgiri (Dongria Kondh won SC case 2013). Current: Great Nicobar Project (₹81,000 crore) threatening Shompen PVTG (229 people) — FRA violations alleged (2024-26). Balance: Free, Prior, Informed Consent (FPIC); rehabilitate before displace; FRA rights settlement before project clearance; Special Purpose Vehicles for tribal benefit sharing; community-led forest management as development model.

2020GS Paper I15 Marks · 250 Words

Examine the socio-economic conditions of tribal communities in India. What are the key government initiatives to address tribal deprivation? (UPSC Mains 2020)

Approach: Socio-economic conditions: 50% below poverty line; PVTG total population only 17 lakh (2011); sickle cell anaemia endemic; literacy gaps; high infant mortality. Key initiatives: PM JANMAN (₹24,104 crore, 2023–26, 75 PVTGs); FRA (2.2 million IFR titles); Eklavya Model Residential Schools (740 sanctioned, 3.5 lakh students); TRIFED/Van Dhan Kendras (MFP value addition); Venture Capital Fund for STs (2024 — ₹10 lakh-5 crore for ST enterprises); Sickle Cell Anaemia Mission (target elimination by 2047); PM Adi Adarsh Gram Yojana (model villages for 40% tribal population). Critical gaps: FRA implementation (50% claims rejected); PESA not operationalised; Manipur conflict exposing governance failures.

2019GS Paper I15 Marks · 250 Words

Discuss the issues related to the integration of tribal communities into mainstream society. Should India follow a policy of isolation, integration, or assimilation for its tribal communities? (UPSC Mains 2019)

Approach: Three approaches: (1) Isolation (J.H. Hutton's policy — preserve tribal culture from outside influence; rejected as museumification); (2) Assimilation (absorb tribals into mainstream — erases identity; rejected by Constitution); (3) Integration (Nehru's tribal panchsheel — develop tribals on their own terms; respect indigenous identity). Nehru's tribal panchsheel: no territorial conquest; develop from within; respect laws and customs; no outside administrators; judge results by human development, not museums or statistics. Constitutional approach: Fifth/Sixth Schedules + FRA + PESA — integration with protection, not assimilation. Current: PM JANMAN addresses PVTG development while respecting cultural identity — "identity-development conflict" as the central challenge. Great Nicobar/Sentinelese cases show limits of integration policy for the most isolated communities.

2016GS Paper I15 Marks · 250 Words

What is the significance of the Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) category? What are the challenges facing these communities? (UPSC Mains 2016)

Approach: PVTGs: 75 groups across 18 states + 1 UT; created 1975 (Dhebar Commission 1973); total population ~17 lakh (Census 2011). Criteria: pre-agricultural technology, low literacy, economic backwardness, declining/stagnant population. Significance: highest priority in tribal welfare; PM JANMAN (₹24,104 crore, 2023-26) specifically targets PVTGs; Habitat Rights under FRA Section 3(1)(e) — strongest legal protection. Challenges: identity-development conflict (how to develop without destroying culture); Great Nicobar Project threatening Shompen PVTG (229 people — most extreme case); disease burden (sickle cell, malnutrition); climate change threatening forest-based livelihoods; language extinction (tribal languages dying as younger generations shift to dominant languages); and the paradox that development projects that violate FRA consent rights are often approved on the grounds of national security.

Mains Preparation

Probable UPSC Mains Questions
on Tribal Societies — 2026

Based on current events (PM JANMAN 2023-26, Manipur conflict 2023-25, Great Nicobar FRA challenge 2024-26, Davinder Singh SC 2024, Caste Census 2025 tribal implications) — these are high-probability questions for UPSC Mains 2026.

PM JANMAN & PVTGs

PM JANMAN (₹24,104 crore) was launched for 75 PVTGs on Janjatiya Gaurav Divas (November 15, 2023). Critically evaluate India's approach to PVTG development — balancing modern facility provision with the "identity-development conflict" that threatens these communities' cultural survival.

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Very High Probability

Great Nicobar & FRA

The ₹81,000 crore Great Nicobar Island project threatens the Shompen PVTG (approximately 229 people) and has been challenged for violating the Forest Rights Act 2006. Critically examine the development-tribal rights conflict and the constitutional safeguards that India must uphold in such decisions.

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Very High Probability

Manipur Ethnic Conflict

The Manipur ethnic conflict (May 2023–present) between Meitei and Kuki-Zo tribal communities has resulted in 250+ deaths and 60,000+ displaced. Critically examine the constitutional and governance dimensions of this conflict, with reference to Scheduled Tribe status, the Fifth Schedule, and AFSPA.

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability

Forest Rights Act

The Forest Rights Act (2006) has been described as India's most significant post-independence legislation for tribal communities. Critically evaluate its achievements (2.2 million IFR titles, 102,889 CFR titles) and its implementation gaps, with reference to recent challenges including the Great Nicobar Project.

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability

Fifth vs Sixth Schedule

Critically compare the Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Indian Constitution as instruments of tribal self-governance. Which is more effective and why? What reforms are needed in the Fifth Schedule to make it as robust as the Sixth?

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability

Integration vs Isolation

Nehru's tribal panchsheel advocated integration without assimilation. Has India followed this principle? Critically examine India's approach to tribal integration with reference to constitutional provisions, the Forest Rights Act, and the PM JANMAN scheme.

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Moderate-High Probability

Denotified Tribes

Denotified Tribes (DNTs) — communities once labelled 'criminal' under the British Criminal Tribes Act 1871 — continue to face stigma, police harassment, and exclusion despite the Act's repeal in 1952. Critically examine the challenges facing DNTs and the adequacy of current government responses.

Expected: 10–15 Marks · Moderate Probability

Development Displacement

Tribal communities constitute 8.9% of India's population but approximately 40% of those displaced by development projects. Critically examine the constitutional and legal safeguards for tribal communities against development-induced displacement and assess their effectiveness.

Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Moderate Probability

Traditional Knowledge

India's tribal communities possess vast traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) that is increasingly valuable for climate adaptation and biodiversity conservation. Critically examine how India protects and leverages this knowledge through legal frameworks including the Biological Diversity Act and Forest Rights Act.

Expected: 10–15 Marks · Moderate Probability

Uncontacted Tribes

India's "uncontacted" tribes — particularly the Sentinelese of North Sentinel Island — represent an extreme policy dilemma between tribal protection and state sovereignty. Critically examine India's approach to protecting the Sentinelese and other uncontacted tribal communities from external contact, with reference to India's 2018 Sentinel policy review.

Expected: 10 Marks · Moderate Probability

Legacy IAS Answer-Writing Tip: For tribal society Mains answers, structure as: (1) Define with data — 8.9% of population (Census 2011), second largest tribal concentration after Africa; (2) Nomenclatures (Adivasi, ST, PVTG, DNT, forest dwellers); (3) Constitutional provisions (Articles 244(1) Fifth Schedule, 244(2) Sixth Schedule, 338A, FRA 2006, PESA 1996); (4) Government schemes (PM JANMAN ₹24,104 crore 2023-26, EMRS, TRIFED, Venture Capital Fund 2024); (5) Challenges (land alienation, Manipur ethnic conflict — 3,399 atrocity cases 2023, Great Nicobar FRA violations); (6) Way forward (FRA implementation, Gram Sabha consent enforcement, Nehru's panchsheel). Always cite at least one current event from 2023–26.
Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs — Tribal Societies in India
for UPSC Preparation

These questions target the most common Google searches by UPSC aspirants on this topic — each answer written for exam depth and Google featured-snippet eligibility.

India's tribal population is approximately 8.9% of total population (10.4 crore people, Census 2011) — the second largest concentration after Africa. Different nomenclatures used:
  • Adivasi: 'original inhabitants' — emphasises indigenous status and pre-colonial presence; not in Constitution but widely used
  • Scheduled Tribes (STs): constitutional designation under Articles 366(25) and 342; 8.6% of population; 1,108 communities listed across 28 states
  • PVTGs: Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups — 75 groups across 18 states and 1 UT; most marginalised, at risk of extinction; total population ~17 lakh (Census 2011)
  • Forest Dwellers: communities dependent on forests for livelihood; covered under FRA 2006
  • Denotified Tribes (DNTs): communities wrongly labelled 'criminal' under British Criminal Tribes Act 1871; repealed 1952 but stigma persists; ~1,500 communities, ~10-12 crore people
  • Nomadic/Semi-nomadic: Banjara, Gaddi, Rabari, Raika — move seasonally; excluded from settled welfare systems
PVTGs (Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups) are the 75 most marginalised tribal communities in India — considered on the verge of extinction. Created in 1975 (Dhebar Commission 1973); total PVTG population approximately 17 lakh (Census 2011). Identification criteria: pre-agricultural technology; low literacy; economic backwardness; declining or stagnant population. Spread across 18 states and 1 UT (Andaman and Nicobar Islands). Key PVTGs: Sentinelese (completely uncontacted, North Sentinel Island), Shompen (~229 people, Great Nicobar), Jarawa, Onge, Great Andamanese; Bonda, Dongria Kondh, Birhor (mainland India). PM JANMAN (Pradhan Mantri Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan) was launched November 15, 2023 (Janjatiya Gaurav Divas) with ₹24,104 crore to saturate all PVTG habitations with basic facilities by 2026 — housing (6 lakh+ completed), drinking water, health (750 MMUs), education, roads (1,900 km), telecom (3,000+ habitations), and sustainable livelihoods through 11 interventions by 9 ministries.
The Forest Rights Act (FRA) 2006 — officially the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act — was enacted to recognise and secure the rights of forest-dwelling STs and other traditional forest dwellers, redressing the historical injustice of colonial-era forest policies. Key rights granted:
  • Individual Forest Rights (IFR): right to hold and live on forest land for habitation or self-cultivation — 2.2 million titles recognised in 15 years
  • Community Forest Rights (CFR): right to use, manage, and protect community forest resources — 102,889 titles recognised
  • Minor Forest Produce (MFP) rights: right to collect, use, and sell honey, bamboo, medicinal plants, etc.
  • Habitat Rights (Section 3(1)(e)): for PVTGs — right to traditional territory, socio-cultural practices, and traditional knowledge — highest tier of tribal land protection
  • Section 4(5): forest land cannot be diverted for non-forest use without Gram Sabha consent — central to Great Nicobar Project controversy
Implementation: approximately 50% of IFR claims have been rejected; CFR recognition weaker; Odisha first state with dedicated FRA implementation budget (2023).
The Manipur ethnic conflict broke out in May 2023 between the predominantly Hindu, valley-based Meitei community (demanding Scheduled Tribe status) and the predominantly Christian, hill-based Kuki-Zo tribal communities (who feared dilution of their ST-linked land rights and job reservations if Meitei receive ST status). The violence resulted in 250+ deaths, 60,000+ displaced, sexual violence, and destruction of villages and places of worship. NCRB 2023: Manipur recorded 3,399 cases of crimes against STs (vs just 1 in 2022). The Supreme Court expressed concern over "absolute breakdown of law and order." Chief Minister resigned; President's Rule imposed February 13, 2025; violence resumed. Why it matters for tribal issues: (1) ST status determination under Article 342 is Presidential; (2) Land rights, ethnic identity, religion, and reservations create a volatile matrix; (3) Fifth Schedule provisions and AFSPA both failed to protect tribal communities; (4) North-East's unique ethnic and territorial complexity requires specific governance frameworks.
Fifth Schedule (Article 244(1)): covers Scheduled Areas (tribal-majority areas in mainland states — 10 states). Key features: Governor has special responsibility and discretionary powers; Tribes Advisory Council (TAC) advises on tribal welfare; Governor can adapt central/state laws; PESA Act 1996 extends Gram Sabha powers to Fifth Schedule areas (mandatory consent for land acquisition and mining). Implementation: PESA not operationalised in most states; Governors rarely use discretionary powers. Sixth Schedule (Article 244(2)): covers tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. Key features: Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) with legislative, judicial, and executive powers — can make laws on land management, forests, social customs, and certain criminal matters. The key distinction: Fifth Schedule = executive protection via Governors; Sixth Schedule = legislative self-governance through ADCs. Sixth Schedule is stronger. PESA was India's attempt to bring Fifth Schedule areas closer to Sixth Schedule-level Gram Sabha powers — but remains poorly implemented.
The Great Nicobar Island (GNI) Project is a ₹81,000 crore infrastructure project comprising an integrated township, transshipment port, solar/gas power plant, and dual-use military-civilian airport on India's southernmost island. It threatens the survival of two tribes: the Shompen (a PVTG of approximately 229 people — largely uncontacted) and the Nicobarese. About 130 sq km of Tribal Reserve was de-notified for the project (2022-2024). Key FRA violations alleged: no forest rights claims settled before clearance; Gram Sabha consent improperly obtained (Nicobarese Tribal Council Chairman later withdrew his 'NOC' — November 2022); and the SDLC was improperly constituted. Calcutta High Court admitted a PIL in December 2024. Tribal Council wrote to government alleging violations (August 2025). National Green Tribunal cleared the project in April 2026 — criticised as "top-down monitoring bypassing FRA consent rights." The case is India's most visible current development-vs-tribal-rights dilemma.
Major challenges include:
  • Land alienation and displacement: tribals ~40% of development-displaced despite being 8.9% of population; FRA implementation gap (50% claims rejected)
  • Violence and atrocities: Manipur conflict (3,399 ST atrocity cases 2023 vs 1 in 2022); low conviction rates under SC/ST Act (~30-35%)
  • Poverty: nearly half of ST population below poverty line; account for 25%+ of India's poorest people
  • Educational deprivation: significantly lower literacy than national average; Eklavya Schools targeting this gap (740 sanctioned, 3.5 lakh students)
  • Health crisis: sickle cell anaemia endemic in tribal areas (20-30% affected in some communities); high infant mortality; National Sickle Cell Anaemia Mission targets elimination by 2047
  • Development projects threatening survival: Great Nicobar Project threatening Shompen PVTG (229 people) — most extreme current case
  • FRA implementation gaps: 50% of claims rejected; community forest rights weaker than individual; 2022 Forest Conservation Rules violated FRA consent provisions
Janjatiya Gaurav Divas (Tribal Pride Day) is observed on November 15 every year — the birth anniversary of Birsa Munda, the iconic tribal freedom fighter who led the Ulgulan (Great Tumult) uprising (1899-1900) against British colonialism, tribal land alienation, and missionary conversion. The government declared November 15 as Janjatiya Gaurav Divas in 2021. Significance: honours tribal freedom fighters' contributions to India's independence movement; celebrates tribal cultures, traditions, and achievements; and serves as the occasion for major tribal welfare announcements. PM JANMAN scheme (₹24,104 crore for 75 PVTGs) was launched on November 15, 2023. Birsa Munda's legacy is invoked as a symbol of tribal resistance against colonial exploitation of forests and land — directly relevant to today's debates on Forest Rights Act implementation and development-displacement dilemmas.
Nehru's tribal panchsheel (five principles for tribal development) articulated India's foundational approach to tribal integration: (1) No territorial conquest — tribes should develop on their own land, not be displaced; (2) Develop from within — build on tribal culture and traditions, not impose external models; (3) Respect tribal laws and customs — govern tribals through their own institutions; (4) No outsider administrators — train tribals to administer their own areas; (5) Judge by human development, not statistics or museums — neither museumify tribes nor judge them purely by economic output. Contemporary relevance: Nehru's panchsheel directly informs the Fifth/Sixth Schedule design; PESA; FRA's Gram Sabha model; and PM JANMAN's attempt to provide modern facilities without cultural destruction. The Great Nicobar Project's threat to the Shompen PVTG — and the state's bypassing of FRA consent requirements — directly violates Nehru's first principle of "no territorial conquest." The "identity-development conflict" in PVTG communities reflects the continuing relevance of the panchsheel framework.
Denotified Tribes (DNTs) are communities once labelled "habitually criminal" under the British Criminal Tribes Act (CTA) of 1871 — subjecting them to mandatory registration, surveillance, and movement restrictions. After independence, the CTA was repealed in 1952 — these communities were "denotified." However: many states replaced the CTA with Habitual Offenders Acts (still used to harass DNT communities); the stigma of "criminal tribe" persists in police, court, and social attitudes; DNT communities face extreme poverty, lack of land ownership, and exclusion from welfare systems. Approximately 1,500 DNT communities with an estimated 10-12 crore people are affected. Government responses: National Commission for Denotified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (NCDNT) constituted; Idate Commission (2008) recommended inclusion in OBC/SC/ST lists (partly implemented); DNT Welfare Development Corporation; Dr Ambedkar Scheme for Social Integration through Sports for DNT communities. Key demand: repeal all Habitual Offenders Acts that replaced the Criminal Tribes Act.
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