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Caste Census in India

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Governance

Source: DH

Context: The Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs (CCPA) has approved caste enumeration census as part of the upcoming Population Census, reversing its 2021 stance.

About the Caste Census in India:

What is a Caste Census? It is the systematic collection of data on caste identities of individuals during a national census. It provides socio-demographic insights essential for affirmative action and social justice planning.

• It is the systematic collection of data on caste identities of individuals during a national census.

• It provides socio-demographic insights essential for affirmative action and social justice planning.

Legal/Constitutional Backing: No specific constitutional provision mandates caste census, but it is permitted under Article 340 for identifying backward classes. As per Article 246 of the Constitution of India, Census is a union subject listed at 69 in the Union List in the Seventh Schedule.

• No specific constitutional provision mandates caste census, but it is permitted under Article 340 for identifying backward classes.

• As per Article 246 of the Constitution of India, Census is a union subject listed at 69 in the Union List in the Seventh Schedule.

Historical Context & Origin: First conducted in British India from 1881 to 1931. Independent India (1951 onwards) excluded caste enumeration except for Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs).

• First conducted in British India from 1881 to 1931.

• Independent India (1951 onwards) excluded caste enumeration except for Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs).

Last Caste Census Held: 1931 Census was the last full caste enumeration. SECC 2011 attempted caste data collection but data remains unpublished.

1931 Census was the last full caste enumeration.

SECC 2011 attempted caste data collection but data remains unpublished.

Need for Caste Census in India:

Data-Driven Affirmative Action: Accurate OBC population data is lacking; Mandal Commission estimated 52% OBCs, but no empirical backing.

E.g.: Bihar’s 2023 caste survey revealed OBC+EBC population at 63%.

Reservation Rationalisation: Helps in quota restructuring and possible sub-categorisation within OBCs for equitable benefit distribution.

Social Justice Planning: Enables targeted health, education, and livelihood schemes for marginalized caste groups.

Women’s Political Reservation: Census data is needed for delimitation, which will operationalize women’s reservation in legislatures.

Constitutional Mandate under Article 15(4): Allows state to make special provisions for backward classes – which needs clear identification.

Challenges to Conducting Caste Census:

Enumeration Complexity: Multiple castes/sub-castes, overlapping categories (e.g., SC-OBC status) make classification difficult.

Lack of Standardised Caste Lists: Centre and states have different OBC lists, making aggregation inconsistent.

Political Manipulation: Caste data can fuel vote bank politics, leading to social polarization.

Data Sensitivity & Accuracy: Self-declaration may result in false reporting or exaggeration, leading to flawed conclusions.

Risk of Deepening Caste Identities: Critics argue it may perpetuate caste consciousness instead of reducing inequalities.

Way Ahead:

Scientific Categorisation: Build consensus on standardised classification of castes and sub-castes.

Transparent Methodology: Use digital tools and trained enumerators to improve accuracy and security of caste data.

Safeguard Against Misuse: Ensure data privacy and restrict caste data usage to policy and welfare only.

Post-Census Action Plan: Publish findings, consult stakeholders, and integrate caste data into policy design.

Constitutional Validation: Any quota revision/sub-categorisation based on caste census must undergo judicial and parliamentary scrutiny.

Conclusion:

The caste census marks a major policy shift aimed at correcting historical data gaps. While it promises greater social justice, the success will depend on methodological integrity and non-political usage. If executed transparently, it can redefine India’s affirmative action roadmap for the next generation.

• Discuss the role of the National Commission for Backward Classes in the wake of its transformation from a statutory body to a constitutional body. (UPSC – 2022)

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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