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A Policy Framework for Relocation and Co-existence in India’s Tiger Reserves

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TH

Context: The Ministry of Tribal Affairs has released “A Policy Framework for Relocation and Co-existence in India’s Tiger Reserves” to safeguard forest-dwelling tribes’ rights under the Forest Rights Act, 2006 during relocation and promote community-inclusive conservation.

About A Policy Framework for Relocation and Co-existence in India’s Tiger Reserves:

What it is?

• A national-level policy framework developed by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs (MoTA) in 2025 to guide how forest-dwelling Scheduled Tribes and other traditional forest dwellers are to be treated during relocation from tiger reserves.

• It seeks to balance tiger conservation with constitutional and legal safeguards for tribal communities.

Organisations Involved:

Ministry of Tribal Affairs (MoTA) – Nodal Ministry drafting the framework.

Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) – To collaborate in implementing the framework.

National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) – Existing regulatory authority for tiger reserves whose directives prompted the new framework.

Key Features:

Last-resort Relocation Principle: Relocation of forest-dwelling communities to be undertaken only as a last option, and strictly after settling rights under the Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006.

Consent-based Process: Mandates free, prior, and informed consent from every Gram Sabha and household before declaring any area as part of a tiger reserve.

Co-existence Option: Recognises the right of communities to continue residing within tiger reserves, exercising FRA rights with State support for basic amenities and co-management roles.

Collaborative Governance: Proposes a National Framework for Community-Centred Conservation and Relocation, co-led by MoEFCC and MoTA, to set procedural standards, timelines, and accountability.

Transparency and Monitoring: Establishes a National Database on Conservation–Community Interface (NDCCI) to track relocations, compensation, and post-relocation outcomes.

Independent Audits: Annual third-party audits of relocation projects to ensure compliance with FRA, Wildlife Protection Act (WPA), 1972, and human rights norms.

Affirmative State Duty: Reiterates that the State has a constitutional duty to protect FRA rights, which may be curtailed only upon demonstrable ecological necessity.

Joint Ministry Oversight: Encourages inter-ministerial coordination to ensure relocation is voluntary, rights-compliant, and scientifically justified.

Significance:

Protects tribal rights: Reinforces the constitutional and legal safeguards under FRA, ensuring communities are not displaced without consent or rehabilitation.

Balances conservation with justice: Marks a shift from exclusionary conservation models to community-inclusive, co-management approaches in tiger reserves.

Prevents forced relocations: Responds to protests following NTCA’s 2024 directive prioritising village relocations, ensuring ethical and voluntary processes.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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