Affirmative Action and the Challenges in Achieving Social Justice
1. Constitutional Provisions for Equity and Social Justice
- Article 15(4) & 15(5): Special provisions for socially and educationally backward classes (OBCs, SCs, STs).
- Article 16(4): Reservation in public employment for underprivileged sections.
- Article 46: Promotion of educational and economic interests of weaker sections.
- SC, ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989: Protection against discrimination and violence.
2. Challenges in Full Realization of Affirmative Action Benefits
- Implementation Gaps:
- Poor execution of welfare schemes (e.g., delays in scholarship distribution).
- Bureaucratic hurdles and corruption reduce effectiveness.
- Economic Exclusion:
- Creamy Layer Issue: Benefits concentrated among relatively well-off groups within backward sections.
- High dropout rates among SC/ST students due to poverty (AISHE 2021: SC dropout rate ~26%).
- Social Barriers:
- Caste-based discrimination persists (e.g., Dalit students facing exclusion in schools).
- Women from marginalized communities face double discrimination.
- Limited Private Sector Inclusion:
- Affirmative action largely restricted to government jobs, which account for only ~3% of total employment.
- Private sector does not follow reservation policies.
- Regional Disparities:
- Southern states have better implementation than BIMARU states.
3. Way Forward
- Effective Monitoring: Strengthening grievance redressal mechanisms.
- Expanding Scope: Extending affirmative action to private sector employment.
- Skill Development: Focus on vocational training and entrepreneurship (e.g., PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana).
- Awareness Campaigns: Ensuring that underprivileged communities are aware of their rights.
Conclusion
Despite constitutional safeguards, structural and implementation challenges hinder full realization of social justice. A multi-pronged approach, combining effective governance, economic empowerment, and social inclusion, is essential for ensuring true equity.