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Scheduled Communities:
| Rank
+
A social Development profile of
| NAME OF THE COLLEGE     
+
SC/ST's (Bihar, Jharkhand & W.B)
| Address 
+
 
| Phone No 
+
==Scheduled Communities==
| College Website 
+
The scheduled communities evolved out of the British colonial concern for the
| Established 
+
Depressed Classes who faced multiple deprivations on account of their low position in
| Seats 
+
the hierarchy of the Hindu caste system. The degrading practice of untouchability
| Cut-off Percentage 
+
figured as the central target for social reformers and their movements. The issue acquired
|-
+
strong political overtones when the British sought to combine the problems of the
| 1
+
Depressed Classes with their communal politics. The Communal Award of August 4,
| St. Stephen’s College – Delhi 
+
1932, after the conclusion of two successive Round Table Conferences in London,
| University Enclave,New Delhi,110007
+
assigned separate electorates not only for the Muslims, Sikhs, Christians and several
| 011-27667271
+
other categories, but also extended it to the Depressed Classes. This led to the historic
| www.ststephens.edu/
+
fast unto death by Gandhi and the subsequent signing of the Poona Pact between B.R.
| 1981
+
Ambedkar and Madan Mohan Malviya on September 24th 1932. According to this
| 177
+
agreement a new formula was evolved in which separate electorates were replaced by
| -
+
reserved constituencies for the Depressed Classes. The actual process of ‘scheduling’ of
|-
+
castes took place thereafter in preparation of the elections in 1937.*
| 2
+
 
| Lady Shriram College for Women (LSR) – Delhi 
+
{As per Government of India (Scheduled Castes) Order of 1936 read with Article 26(i)
| Lajpat Nagar-IV,New Delhi,110024
+
of the First Schedule to Government of India Act 1935, Scheduled Castes meant
| 011-26434459/ 26460400/ 26460434/ 45494949
+
`such castes, races or tribes, or parts of or groups within castes, races or tribes, being
| www.lsr.edu.in/
+
castes, races, or tribes, or parts or groups which appear to His Majesty in Council, to
| 1956
+
correspond to the classes of persons formerly known as `the depressed classes’, as His
| 782
+
Majesty in Council may specify’. (Cited in Chatterjee 1996 vol. : 162).}
| 91.0-98.0
+
 
|-
+
Ambedkar, who was the principal crusader against untouchability, assumed the
| 3
+
historic role of drafting the Indian Constitution of free India. He introduced the famous
| Loyola College – Chennai 
+
Article 11 of the Drafting Committee on 1st November 1947 which carried through the
| Nungambakkam,Chennai,600034
+
following resolution :
| 044-28178200
+
 
| www.loyolacollege.edu/
+
 
| 1925
+
“Untouchability is abolished and its practice in any form is forbidden. The
| 915
+
enforcement of any disability arising out of ‘untouchability’ shall be an offence which
| 75.0-90.0
+
shall be punishable in accordance with law” (Rao 1966 : 298).
|-
+
 
| 4
+
Unlike the British pre-occupation with the scheduling of castes in preparation for
| Department of Humanities and Social Sciences (Christ University) – Bangalore 
+
separate communal electorates, which mainly entailed, by stages, the elimination of tribal
| DSR POST, Hosur Road,Bangalore,560029
+
communities from the fold of Depressed Classes, the proper task of scheduling of tribes
| 080-40129009
+
took place in 1950 with the new Constitution. This is hardly surprising in view of
| www.christuniversity.in
+
numerous tribal insurrections against British exploitation and domination. A series of 12
| 1969
+
Constitution (Scheduled Tribes Orders) and amendments were passed between 1950 and
| 1060
+
1991 covering various States and Union Territories.
| 80.0-92.0
+
 
|-
+
In 1991 the Scheduled Caste (henceforward SC) population was 138,223,000
| 5
+
(nearest ‘000), accounting for 16.48 percent of the total population of the country. Four
| Hindu College – Delhi 
+
important demographic features draw our attention at this stage :
| University of Delhi, University Enclave,New Delhi,110007
+
 
| 011-27667184
+
1) The States which exceeded the national proportion of SCs and consequently had
| www.hinducollege.org/
+
the highest concentration of SCs were : Punjab (28.31%), Himachal Pradesh
| 1899
+
(25.34%), West Bengal (23.62%), Uttar Pradesh (21.05%), Haryana (19.75%),
| 501
+
Tamil Nadu (19.18%), Delhi (19.05%), Rajasthan (17.29%) and Chandigarh
| 98.0-99.0
+
(16.51%).
|-
+
 
| 6
+
2) States which have substantial SC population (more than 10m) are : Uttar Pradesh
| Miranda House – Delhi 
+
(29.3m) contributing 21.18% of national SC population; West Bengal (16.1m)
| University of Delhi,New Delhi,110007
+
contributing 11.63%; Bihar (12.6m) contributing 9.10%; and Tamil Nadu
| 011-27666983/ 27667437/ 2766736
+
(10.7m) contributing 7.75% of the SC population of India. A State may be
| www.mirandahouse.ac.in
+
amongst those having the most numerous SC population, and yet its proportion to
| 1948
+
the total population (of the State) may be lower than the national average. For
| 813
+
example, erstwhile Bihar was a populous SC state, yet only 14.55% of its
| 89.0-98.0
+
population was SC.
|-
+
 
| 7
+
3) The State having the highest number of SC communities is Karnataka (101) with
| Fergusson College – Pune 
+
an SC population below 10m. (7.4,), with proportion of SCs to the population of
| F.C. Road,Pune,411004
+
the State slightly below the national proportion (16.38%) and contributing only
| 022-30866000
+
5.33% of the total country’s SC population. Karnataka is followed by Orissa with
| www.fergusson.edu/
+
93 SC communities; Tamil Nadu with 76; Kerala with 68; Uttar Pradesh with 66;
| 1885
+
Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and West Bengal with 59; and Himachal
| 594
+
Pradesh with 56.
| 89.0-96.0
+
 
|-
+
Thus States with the largest multiplicity of SC communities, need not be amongst
| 8
+
the most populous SC States, nor among those whose contribution to the national
| Madras Christian College(MCC) – Chennai 
+
SC population are among the highest.
| East Tambaram,Chennai,600059
+
 
| 044-2239865
+
4) Conversely, States making the largest contributions of SC populations to the
| www.mcc.edu.in
+
national SC total need not have the highest proportions of SCs or the largest
| 1867
+
number of SC communities within their States. These States are Uttar Pradesh
| 953
+
(21.18%), West Bengal (11.63%), Bihar (9.10%), Tamil Nadu (7.75%), Andhra
| 70.0-99.0
+
Pradesh (7.66%), Madhya Pradesh (6.96%) and Maharashtra (6.34%).
|-
+
 
| 9
+
Table 1.1
| Hansraj College – Delhi 
+
 
| Mahatma Hansraj Marg, Malkaganj,New Delhi,110007
+
Source : Cols. 1, 2 and 3 : Chakrabarty and Ghosh 2002 : Table 1.1 pg.5 Col.4; Chatterjee 1991, Vol.4 :
| 011-27667747/ 27667458
+
1180-1283
| www.hansrajcollege.co.in/
+
 
| 1948
+
 
| 437
+
 
| 66.0-98.0
+
The Scheduled Tribe (henceforward ST) population of India is almost 50 percent
|-
+
less (67,758,000, nearest ‘000), than the SC population of India, constituting 8.08
| 10
+
percent of the country’s total population. The picture here is quite interesting. In sharp
| Ramjas College – Delhi 
+
contrast to SCs, a number of States/Union Territories have extraordinarily high
| University Enclave,New Delhi,110007
+
concentrations of tribal population (i.e. tribal population as proportion of total population
| 011-27667706
+
of the States/Union Territories (henceforward UTs). These States/UTs are : Mizoram
| www.ramjascollege.edu/
+
(94.75%) with a population of only 654,000; Lakshadeep (93.15%) with a meagre
| 1917
+
population of 48,000; Nagaland (87.70%) with a population of 1,061,000; Meghalaya
| 719
+
(85.53%) with a population of 1,518,000; Dadra and Nagar Haveli (78.89%) with a
| 80.0-98.0
+
population of 109,000; and Arunachal Pradesh (63.66%) with a population of 550,000.
|-
+
Then there is a steep drop with Manipur (34.41%) having a population of 632,000;
| 11
+
Tripura (30.95%) with a population of 853,000. These eight States/UTs having tribal
| Sri Ram College of Commerce(SRCC), Delhi 
+
concentrations varying from 30.95% to 94.75%, have a total population of 5.5m, which is
| University of Delhi North Campus, Maurice Nagar,New Delhi,110007
+
only 8.1 percent of the total tribal population of the country.
| 011-27667905
+
Conspicuously, in the most populous tribal States, the concentration of ST
| www.srcc.edu/
+
population is very much lower, though substantially higher than the national proportion.
| 1926
+
The largest tribal population is in Madhya Pradesh (15.4m) constituting 23.27 percent of
| 154
+
the population of the State and 22.73 percent of the tribal population of the country. This
| 97.0-98.0
+
is followed by Maharashtra (7.3m), Orissa (7.0m), Bihar (6.6m), Gujarat (6.1m),
|-
+
Rajasthan (5.5m), Andhra Pradesh (4.2m), West Bengal (3.8m) and Assam (2.9m).
| 12
+
Finally, the States/UTs with the highest number of tribal communities are : Orissa
| Stella Maris College – Chennai 
+
(62); Karnataka and Maharashtra (49); Madhya Pradesh (46); West Bengal (38), Tamil
| 17, Cathedral Road,Chennai,600086
+
Nadu (36); Kerala (35); Andhra Pradesh (33); and Bihar (30).
| 044-28111987/ 28111951
+
 
| www.stellamariscollege.org/
+
 
| 1957
+
Table 1.2
| 323
+
 
| 80.0-94.0
+
Note: Figures in percentage in Col.2 refer to the proportion of ST population of the States to national ST
|-
+
population.
| 13
+
 
| Indraprastha College for women – Delhi 
+
Source: Cols. 1 & 2 : Chakrabarty and Ghosh 2000 : Table 1.2 , pg.6
| 31, Sham Nath Marg,New Delhi,110054
+
 
| 011-23954085/ 23962009
+
Col. 3 Sachchidanand and Prasad 1996 : XXXVIII LVIII.
| www.ipcollege.ac.in/
+
 
| 1924
+
What is extraordinary in this overall pattern is that none of the States with the
| 1302
+
largest tribal population (2m and above) and those having the most numerous tribal
| 50.0-99.0
+
communities, figure among States/UTs having the highest concentration of STs. Few, if
|-
+
any, countries can parallel this complex ethno-demography.
| 14
+
 
| Symbiosis Society's College of Arts & Commerce, Pune 
+
What is unique in India, is the existence of the least populous self governing,
| Senapati Bapat Road,Pune,411004
+
politically empowered, tribal States mostly in the north east, together constituting a
| 022-25653903
+
negligible proportion of the tribal population of India, nevertheless being protected
| www.symbiosiscollege.edu.in/
+
through Constitutional safeguards against ethnic swamping by the other communities in a
| 1992
+
country with a bursting, burgeoning billion population. They have evolved out of their
| 113
+
specific historical circumstances which had posed basic problems of their integration with
| 73.0-89.0
+
the rest of the country.
|-
+
 
| 15
+
It is, by and large, the bulk of the tribal population in the more populous
| Sri Venkateswara College – Delhi 
+
heterogeneous States that have encountered the serious problems of social and economic
| Benito Juarez Road, Dhaula Kuan,New Delhi,110021
+
derivation and development.
| 01124112196/ 24118590
+
 
| www.svc.ac.in/
+
References
| 1961
+
 
| 509
+
Rao, Shiva The Framing of India’s Constitution, New Delhi, IIPA, 1966.
| 96.0-97.0
+
 
|-
+
Chatterjee, S.K. Scheduled Castes in India Vol.1, New Delhi, Gyan Prakashan, 1996.
| 16
+
 
| Jesus & Mary College (JMC) – Delhi 
+
-do- Scheduled Castes in India, Vol..4, New Delhi, Gyan Prakashan,
| Chanakyapuri,New Delhi,110021
+
1996.
| 011-26110041/ 26875400
+
 
| www.jmc.ac.in/
+
Chakraborty G. P.K. Ghosh Human Development Profile of Scheduled Castes and Tribes in and Selected States, New Delhi, NCAER, 2000.
| 1968
+
 
| 731
+
Sachidanand R.R. Prasad Encyclopaedic Profile of Indian Tribes, New Delhi, Discovery  and Publishing House, 1996
| -
+
 
|-
+
[[Category:Pages with broken file links|TEST1
| 17
+
TEST1]]
| Women’s Christian College – Chennai 
+
 
| No. 51 College Road Nungambakkam,Chennai,600006
+
[[Category:Pages with broken file links|TEST1TEST1
| 044-28275926
+
TEST1]]
| www.wcc.edu.in/
+
 
| 1915
+
[[Category:Pages with broken file links|TEST1TEST1TEST1
| 165
+
TEST1]]
| 75.0-97.0
+
 
|-
+
[[Category:Pages with broken file links|TEST1TEST1TEST1TEST1
| 18
+
TEST1]]
| St. Joseph’s College – Bangalore 
+
| PB 27094, 36 Lalbagh Road,Bangalore,560027
+
| 080-22274079/ 22211429
+
| www.sjc.ac.in/
+
| 1882
+
| 400
+
| 50.0-80.0
+
|-
+
| 19
+
| St.Xavier's College – Ahmedabad 
+
| P.B. No. 4168,Ahmedabad,380009
+
| 079-26308057
+
| www.sxca.edu.in/
+
| 1955
+
| 282
+
| 40.0-92.0
+
|-
+
| 20
+
| Ethiraj College for Women – Chennai 
+
| 70, Ethiraj Salai, Egmore,Chennai,600008
+
| 044-28287201
+
| www.ethirajcollege.in
+
| 1948
+
| 598
+
| 61.0-94.5
+
|-
+
| 21
+
| Mount Carmel College – Bangalore 
+
| No. 58, Palace Road,Bangalore,560052
+
| 080-22261759
+
| www.mountcarmelcollegeblr.co.in
+
| 1948
+
| 505
+
| 60.0-75.0
+
|-
+
| 22
+
| Mehr Chand Mahajan D. A. V. College for Women(MCM DAV College for Women)- Sec 36 A – Chandigarh
+
| Sector 36-A,Chandigarh,160036
+
| 0172-2603355
+
| www.mcmdavcw-chd.edu/
+
| 1968
+
| 908
+
| 45.0-98.0
+
|-
+
| 23
+
| St. Francis College for Women – Hyderabad 
+
| Uma Nagar, Begumpet,Hyderabad,500016
+
| 040-23403200
+
| www.sfc.ac.in/
+
| 1959
+
| 210
+
| 70.0-95.0
+
|-
+
| 24
+
| Kristu Jayanti College, Bangalore 
+
| K.Narayanapura, Kothanur,Bangalore,560077
+
| 080-28465611
+
| www.kristujayanti.edu.in
+
| 1999
+
| 142
+
| 55.0-91.0
+
|-
+
| 25
+
| Mithibai College of Arts, Mumbai
+
| Ville Parle West,Mumbai,400056
+
| 022-42339001
+
| www.mithibai.ac.in
+
| 1961
+
| 321
+
| 75.0-97.0
+
|-
+
| 26
+
| Kamala Nehru College for Women – Delhi 
+
| August kranti Marg, University of Delhi,New Delhi,110049
+
| 011-26494881
+
| www.knc.edu.in/
+
| 1964
+
| 719
+
| 52.0-99.0
+
|-
+
| 27
+
| Ramnarain Ruia College – Mumbai 
+
| L. Nappo Road, Matunga, Dadar East,Mumbai,400019
+
| 022-24143119/ 24143098
+
| www.ruiacollege.edu/
+
| 1937
+
| 594
+
| 87.0-97.0
+
|-
+
| 28
+
| Sacred Heart College – Cochin 
+
| Thevara Kochi ,Kerala,682013
+
| 0484-2663380/ 4044412
+
| www.shcollege.ac.in
+
| 1944
+
| 165
+
| 65.0-98.0
+
|-
+
| 29
+
| Gargi College – Delhi 
+
| University of Delhi, Siri Fort Road,New Delhi,110049
+
| 011-26494544
+
| www.gargi.du.ac.in/
+
| 1967
+
| 986
+
| 60.0-96.0
+
|-
+
| 30
+
| Goswami Ganesh Dutta Sanatan Dharma College (GGDSD), Sector 32 – Chandigarh 
+
| Sector 32 c ,Chandigarh,160030
+
| 0172-4912400/ 2600090
+
| www.ggdsd.ac.in
+
| 1973
+
| 737
+
| 60.0-97.0
+
|-
+
| 31
+
| D A V College-Sec 10 – Chandigarh 
+
| Sector - 10,Chandigarh,160011
+
| 0172-2743980
+
| www.davc.com
+
| 1958
+
| 1734
+
| 50.0-92.0
+
|-
+
| 32
+
| Delhi College of Arts & Commerce (DCAC) – Delhi 
+
| Netaji Nagar,New Delhi,110023
+
| 011-24109821
+
| www.dcac.du.ac.in/
+
| 1987
+
| 529
+
| 85.0-90.0
+
|-
+
| 33
+
| St.Teresa's College – Cochin 
+
| Park Avenue ,Kerala,682011
+
| 0484-2351870/ 2381312
+
| www.teresas.ac.in
+
| 1925
+
| 447
+
| 60.0-98.0
+
|-
+
| 34
+
| Sophia College for Women Mumbai 
+
| Bhulabhai Desai Road,Mumbai,400026
+
| 022-23512642/ 23523304
+
| www.sophiacollegemumbai.com/
+
| 1941
+
| 500
+
| -
+
|-
+
| 35
+
| Maharaja Agrasen College (MAC) – Delhi 
+
| University of Delhi, Vasundhara Enclave,New Delhi,110096
+
| 011-22610565/ 22610552
+
| www.mac.du.ac.in/
+
| 1994
+
| 450
+
| 74.0-95.0
+
|-
+
| 36
+
| K J Somaiya College of Arts & Commerce – Mumbai 
+
| Vidyanagri Vidyavihar,Mumbai,400077
+
| 022-21022915
+
| www.somaiya.edu
+
| 1960
+
| 333
+
| 39.0-90.0
+
|-
+
| 37
+
| Isabella Thoburn College – Lucknow 
+
| 7 Faridabad Road,Lucknow,226007
+
| 0522-2321107
+
| www.itcollege.ac.in
+
| 1921
+
| 1240
+
| -
+
|-
+
| 38
+
| M E S College of Arts, Science & Commerce, Bangalore 
+
| Prof. Mplsastry Road 15th Cross Malleswaram,Bangalore,560003
+
| 080-23562526
+
| www.mesinstitutions.org/degreecollege
+
| 1956
+
| 85
+
| 35.0-92.0
+
|-
+
| 39
+
| Kishinchand Chellaram (K C) College of Arts, Science and Commerce, Mumbai 
+
| D W Road, Churchgate,Mumbai,400020
+
| 022-22855726/ 66981000
+
| www.kccollege.org.in
+
| 1954
+
| 240
+
| 55.0-72.0
+
|-
+
| 40
+
| Dr.B R Ambedkar Degree College – Hyderabad 
+
| 1-8-1 Baghlingampally,Hyderabad,500044
+
| 040-27661136
+
| www.ambedkarcollege.in
+
| 1973
+
| 450
+
| 51.0-90.0
+
|-  
+
| 41
+
| Maharani Lakshmi Ammanni College for Women (MLACW) – Bangalore 
+
| Science PO, Malleshwaram, 18th Cross,Bangalore,560012
+
| 080-23349311
+
| www.mlacw.org/
+
| 1972
+
| 90
+
| 50.0-88.0
+
|-
+
| 42
+
| St. Mira's College of Arts,Science and Commerce (St. Mira's College for Girls) – Pune 
+
| 6, Koregoan Road,Pune,411001
+
| 022-26124846
+
| www.stmirascollegepune.edu.in/
+
| 1962
+
| 240
+
| 40.0-50.0
+
|-
+
| 43
+
| MOP Vaishnav College for women – Chennai 
+
| 20, IV Lane, Nungambakkam High Road,Chennai,600034
+
| 044-28330262/ 28330507
+
| www.mop-vaishnav.ac.in/
+
| 1996
+
| 70
+
| 70.0-75.0
+
|-
+
| 44
+
| SIES College of Arts Science & Commerce 
+
| SION (W),Mumbai,400022 022-24072729
+
| siesases@siesases.net
+
| 1960
+
| 398
+
| 60.0-68.0
+
|  
+
|}
+

Latest revision as of 14:44, 16 January 2022

Scheduled Communities: A social Development profile of SC/ST's (Bihar, Jharkhand & W.B)

[edit] Scheduled Communities

The scheduled communities evolved out of the British colonial concern for the Depressed Classes who faced multiple deprivations on account of their low position in the hierarchy of the Hindu caste system. The degrading practice of untouchability figured as the central target for social reformers and their movements. The issue acquired strong political overtones when the British sought to combine the problems of the Depressed Classes with their communal politics. The Communal Award of August 4, 1932, after the conclusion of two successive Round Table Conferences in London, assigned separate electorates not only for the Muslims, Sikhs, Christians and several other categories, but also extended it to the Depressed Classes. This led to the historic fast unto death by Gandhi and the subsequent signing of the Poona Pact between B.R. Ambedkar and Madan Mohan Malviya on September 24th 1932. According to this agreement a new formula was evolved in which separate electorates were replaced by reserved constituencies for the Depressed Classes. The actual process of ‘scheduling’ of castes took place thereafter in preparation of the elections in 1937.*

{As per Government of India (Scheduled Castes) Order of 1936 read with Article 26(i) of the First Schedule to Government of India Act 1935, Scheduled Castes meant `such castes, races or tribes, or parts of or groups within castes, races or tribes, being castes, races, or tribes, or parts or groups which appear to His Majesty in Council, to correspond to the classes of persons formerly known as `the depressed classes’, as His Majesty in Council may specify’. (Cited in Chatterjee 1996 vol. : 162).}

Ambedkar, who was the principal crusader against untouchability, assumed the historic role of drafting the Indian Constitution of free India. He introduced the famous Article 11 of the Drafting Committee on 1st November 1947 which carried through the following resolution :


“Untouchability is abolished and its practice in any form is forbidden. The enforcement of any disability arising out of ‘untouchability’ shall be an offence which shall be punishable in accordance with law” (Rao 1966 : 298).

Unlike the British pre-occupation with the scheduling of castes in preparation for separate communal electorates, which mainly entailed, by stages, the elimination of tribal communities from the fold of Depressed Classes, the proper task of scheduling of tribes took place in 1950 with the new Constitution. This is hardly surprising in view of numerous tribal insurrections against British exploitation and domination. A series of 12 Constitution (Scheduled Tribes Orders) and amendments were passed between 1950 and 1991 covering various States and Union Territories.

In 1991 the Scheduled Caste (henceforward SC) population was 138,223,000 (nearest ‘000), accounting for 16.48 percent of the total population of the country. Four important demographic features draw our attention at this stage :

1) The States which exceeded the national proportion of SCs and consequently had the highest concentration of SCs were : Punjab (28.31%), Himachal Pradesh (25.34%), West Bengal (23.62%), Uttar Pradesh (21.05%), Haryana (19.75%), Tamil Nadu (19.18%), Delhi (19.05%), Rajasthan (17.29%) and Chandigarh (16.51%).

2) States which have substantial SC population (more than 10m) are : Uttar Pradesh (29.3m) contributing 21.18% of national SC population; West Bengal (16.1m) contributing 11.63%; Bihar (12.6m) contributing 9.10%; and Tamil Nadu (10.7m) contributing 7.75% of the SC population of India. A State may be amongst those having the most numerous SC population, and yet its proportion to the total population (of the State) may be lower than the national average. For example, erstwhile Bihar was a populous SC state, yet only 14.55% of its population was SC.

3) The State having the highest number of SC communities is Karnataka (101) with an SC population below 10m. (7.4,), with proportion of SCs to the population of the State slightly below the national proportion (16.38%) and contributing only 5.33% of the total country’s SC population. Karnataka is followed by Orissa with 93 SC communities; Tamil Nadu with 76; Kerala with 68; Uttar Pradesh with 66; Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and West Bengal with 59; and Himachal Pradesh with 56.

Thus States with the largest multiplicity of SC communities, need not be amongst the most populous SC States, nor among those whose contribution to the national SC population are among the highest.

4) Conversely, States making the largest contributions of SC populations to the national SC total need not have the highest proportions of SCs or the largest number of SC communities within their States. These States are Uttar Pradesh (21.18%), West Bengal (11.63%), Bihar (9.10%), Tamil Nadu (7.75%), Andhra Pradesh (7.66%), Madhya Pradesh (6.96%) and Maharashtra (6.34%).

Table 1.1

Source : Cols. 1, 2 and 3 : Chakrabarty and Ghosh 2002 : Table 1.1 pg.5 Col.4; Chatterjee 1991, Vol.4 : 1180-1283


The Scheduled Tribe (henceforward ST) population of India is almost 50 percent less (67,758,000, nearest ‘000), than the SC population of India, constituting 8.08 percent of the country’s total population. The picture here is quite interesting. In sharp contrast to SCs, a number of States/Union Territories have extraordinarily high concentrations of tribal population (i.e. tribal population as proportion of total population of the States/Union Territories (henceforward UTs). These States/UTs are : Mizoram (94.75%) with a population of only 654,000; Lakshadeep (93.15%) with a meagre population of 48,000; Nagaland (87.70%) with a population of 1,061,000; Meghalaya (85.53%) with a population of 1,518,000; Dadra and Nagar Haveli (78.89%) with a population of 109,000; and Arunachal Pradesh (63.66%) with a population of 550,000. Then there is a steep drop with Manipur (34.41%) having a population of 632,000; Tripura (30.95%) with a population of 853,000. These eight States/UTs having tribal concentrations varying from 30.95% to 94.75%, have a total population of 5.5m, which is only 8.1 percent of the total tribal population of the country. Conspicuously, in the most populous tribal States, the concentration of ST population is very much lower, though substantially higher than the national proportion. The largest tribal population is in Madhya Pradesh (15.4m) constituting 23.27 percent of the population of the State and 22.73 percent of the tribal population of the country. This is followed by Maharashtra (7.3m), Orissa (7.0m), Bihar (6.6m), Gujarat (6.1m), Rajasthan (5.5m), Andhra Pradesh (4.2m), West Bengal (3.8m) and Assam (2.9m). Finally, the States/UTs with the highest number of tribal communities are : Orissa (62); Karnataka and Maharashtra (49); Madhya Pradesh (46); West Bengal (38), Tamil Nadu (36); Kerala (35); Andhra Pradesh (33); and Bihar (30).


Table 1.2

Note: Figures in percentage in Col.2 refer to the proportion of ST population of the States to national ST population.

Source: Cols. 1 & 2 : Chakrabarty and Ghosh 2000 : Table 1.2 , pg.6

Col. 3 Sachchidanand and Prasad 1996 : XXXVIII – LVIII.

What is extraordinary in this overall pattern is that none of the States with the largest tribal population (2m and above) and those having the most numerous tribal communities, figure among States/UTs having the highest concentration of STs. Few, if any, countries can parallel this complex ethno-demography.

What is unique in India, is the existence of the least populous self governing, politically empowered, tribal States mostly in the north east, together constituting a negligible proportion of the tribal population of India, nevertheless being protected through Constitutional safeguards against ethnic swamping by the other communities in a country with a bursting, burgeoning billion population. They have evolved out of their specific historical circumstances which had posed basic problems of their integration with the rest of the country.

It is, by and large, the bulk of the tribal population in the more populous heterogeneous States that have encountered the serious problems of social and economic derivation and development.

References

Rao, Shiva The Framing of India’s Constitution, New Delhi, IIPA, 1966.

Chatterjee, S.K. Scheduled Castes in India Vol.1, New Delhi, Gyan Prakashan, 1996.

-do- Scheduled Castes in India, Vol..4, New Delhi, Gyan Prakashan,

1996.

Chakraborty G. P.K. Ghosh Human Development Profile of Scheduled Castes and Tribes in and Selected States, New Delhi, NCAER, 2000.

Sachidanand R.R. Prasad Encyclopaedic Profile of Indian Tribes, New Delhi, Discovery and Publishing House, 1996

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