Published on: September 21, 2025

SCHEDULED TRIBES IN KARNATAKA

SCHEDULED TRIBES IN KARNATAKA

NEWS

  • The Karnataka government is set to resend its proposal to the Union government for including the Kuruba community in the Scheduled Tribes (ST) list.
  • This revives the debate on the criteria and procedures for designating communities as Scheduled Tribes.

HIGHLIGHTS

Constitutional Basis

  • Article 342: Empowers the President to notify a community as ST for any state/UT.
  • Communities so notified are listed in the Presidential Order, 1950.
  • Unlike Scheduled Castes, which are religion-specific, the ST list is religion-neutral.

Criteria for Inclusion

  • No explicit constitutional definition.
  • Historically, criteria evolved from the 1931 Census “primitive tribes” list and 1935 Act’s “backward tribes.”
  • The Lokur Committee (1965) outlined parameters:
    1. Primitive traits
    2. Distinctive culture
    3. Geographical isolation
    4. Shyness of contact with wider society
    5. Backwardness
  • Tribes assimilated with the general population were excluded.

Parliamentary & Procedural Process

  • States/UTs recommend inclusion/exclusion.
  • Union Ministry of Tribal Affairs forwards to:
    • National Commission for Scheduled Tribes (NCST)
    • Registrar General of India (RGI), in consultation with experts like the Anthropological Survey of India.
  • On approval, the Union government introduces a Constitutional Amendment Bill in Parliament.
  • Passage requires a special majority in both Houses (two-thirds present & voting, and >50% of total membership).

Affirmative Action Entitlements

  • Communities in the ST list get reservations in education, government jobs, and local bodies.
  • Political representation: reserved seats in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies for SCs and STs (not for OBCs).

Significance

  • The inclusion of communities like Kurubas reflects ongoing demands for recognition and affirmative action.
  • The process underscores the delicate balance between constitutional safeguards, social justice, and empirical evaluation of backwardness.