About the Book
Development is a continuous and a multidimensional process which involves reorganization and reorientation of the entire economic and social system. The tribal communities in India are at different levels of this socioeconomic development. There are tribes that are still dependent on forests for their livelihood with their primitive technology, limited skills and traditional ritual practices. On the other hand, there are several communities in India who have been totally assimilated into national mainstream. However, low productivity from land, dispersed habitation, shrinking shifting cultivation, weak cooperative and marketing infrastructure, and land grabbing by non-tribals leading to their dispossession and marginalization is a common phenomenon across the tribal areas. This volume is a critical review to identify, document and comprehend the broad trends in development and discontent emanating across tribal groups. Over the last 65 years, the Scheduled Tribes appear to have evolved into two distinct groups: those communities who have been able to take advantage of the protection and benefits guaranteed to them under the Constitution and those communities to whom such benefits and protection have failed to reach. The alarming fact is that due to alienation from fruits of development process these groups fall easy prey to alternative ideologies and create law and order problems in their hinterland. This volume strives to encompass all these issues related to tribal areas in India.
The book promises to be a valuable reference for all concerned researchers, bureaucrats, policy makers, planners, practitioners and those concerned with the tribal development.
Contents
Part I: Issues of Development in Tribal India: Contemporary Perspectives
Part II: Neo-Liberal Development and its Impact on Tribal Areas
Part III: Emerging Discontent in Contemporary Tribal India
Part IV: Challenges of Mainstreaming Tribal Communities India
Part V: Policies on Human Development and Tribal Communities
About the Author / Editor
Yatindra Singh Sisodia is Professor and Director at M.P. Institute of Social Science Research, Ujjain. His areas of interest are democracy, decentralized governance, tribal issues and developmental issues. He has authored/edited more than a dozen books including Democratic Governance and Human Development, India’s Development Scenario, Experiment of Direct Democracy, Rural Development: Macro-Micro Reality, Functioning of Panchayat Raj System, and Tribal Issues in India. Besides this, he has written five monographs and published more than sixty research papers in journals of repute and in edited volumes.
Tapas Kumar Dalapati is Assistant Professor at M.P. Institute of Social Science Research, Ujjain. His research area encompasses tribal land alienation, tribal movements, agrarian labour relations and changing facets of Hindu marriages. At present he is Associate Editor of Madhya Pradesh Journal of Social Sciences.