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Reservation in India

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Not to be confused with Indian reservations of Native Americans (dubbed "Indians") in
the United States.
Reservation is a system of affirmative action in India that provides historically
disadvantaged groups representation in education, employment and politics. Based on
provisions in the Indian Constitution, it allows the Indian government to set reserved
quotas or seats, which lower the qualifications needed in exams, job openings etc. for
"socially and economically backward citizens." [1][2]
Reservation was intended to uplift these communities but the government's failure to
control the amount of reservation and lack of comprehensive review of the policies by
the government have resulted in wide criticism and backlash. It is often described as a
menace primarily due to its anti-meritocratic nature, which is causing further division
and discrimination in the society

Reservation is primarily given to all 3 groups: Scheduled Castes, Scheduled


Tribes, Other Backward Classes abbreviated as SC, ST, OBC respectively. Originally
reservation was only given to SCs and STs but was later extended to OBCs in 1987
after the implementation of the Mandal Commission report.

 The first are the Scheduled Castes. These communities were variously seen as at the
bottom or "underneath" the caste system in South Asia, below even the Sudra varna. These
castes had hereditary professions such as agricultural labourers, manual scavenging,
tannery, washing clothes, daily wage workers, fishing and more. They were subjected to the
practice of untouchability, which takes the form of various social restrictions ranging from
inability to touch other castes to inability to use the same water source or even live in the
same area. Today many of these castes are landless labourers.
 The next group are the Scheduled Tribes. The definition of this group varies, but the
criteria for a Scheduled Tribe "indications of primitive traits, distinctive culture, geographical
isolation, shyness of contact with the community at large, and backwardness." Most of these
groups are considered Adivasis, and the original inhabitants while others are nomadic tribes
who were notified as "criminal tribes" under British rule. They range in modes of existence
from subsistence agriculturalists who have had interaction between the outside world to
hunter-gatherer groups still in the jungles. They have suffered from exploitation of their land
by the British. However, in the Northeast, many of the tribes are relatively better-off and
possess interaction with the outside world. They are around 100 million people, around 8%
of the population[citation needed]. Examples include the Bodo, Gondi, Banjara, and Santal.
 The third main group are the Other Backward Classes. They were not originally in the
reservation scheme, but during the premiership of Moraji Desai, the Mandal Commission
studied all the communities in India to find what castes were "backward" compared to the
general population. Based on 1931 census data, they estimated 52% of India's population
belonged to castes that were "backward" due to various socio-economic factors like wealth
or jobs performed. The possibility for providing reservation to these people was allowed for
in Article 15(4) and Article 16(4), which states the government can provide reservation to
"backward classes." Although the center maintains its own list of OBC's, comprising over
5,000 castes and subcastes, each state can create their own backward caste list for in-state
reservations. Most OBCs are lower castes, were classified originally in the shudra varna,
and have low ritual status. However, there are other castes in the OBC list who, although
ritually low, are economically dominant and in many cases are the enforcers of the caste
hierarchy, including some Brahmin groups.
In some states there is a divide between backward castes, who face some socio-
economic disadvantage and most backward or extremely backward castes, who face a
high amount of social discrimination barely above Dalits in their status. In fact, unlike
Scheduled Castes, OBCs do not have to be Hindu and many states give benefits to
some Muslim and Christian communities. This list is most subject to change since the
criteria is not as stringent, making it a list added to often by politicians to please certain
sections of their voters.OBC Category are under forgery reservation.
Those who are not a member of these groups are lumped together in the General
category, sometimes called the Other category (Other Caste). In General Category has
of mostly high castes who do not benefited from reservations: most communities in the
Brahmin, Kshatriya and Vaishya varnas. This General Category people in history had
hereditary professions such as pujari, zamindar, kings, doctors, and soldiers, and often
owned land used for agriculture.

History[edit]
Before independence[edit]
Quota systems favouring certain castes and other communities existed
before independence in several areas of British India. Demands for various forms of
positive discrimination had been made, for example, in 1882 and 1891. [6] Shahu, the
Maharaja of the princely state of Kolhapur, introduced reservation in favor of non-
Brahmin and backward classes, much of which came into force in 1902. He provided
free education to everyone and opened several hostels to make it easier for them to
receive it. He also tried to ensure that people thus educated were suitably employed,
and he appealed both for a class-free India and the abolition of untouchability. His 1902
measures created 50 percent reservation for backward communities. [citation needed] On 16
September 1921, the first Justice Party government passed the first Communal
Government Order (G. O. # 613), thereby becoming the first elected body in the Indian
legislative history to legislate reservations, which have since become standard across
the country.
The British Raj introduced elements of reservation in the Government of India Act of
1909 and there were many other measures put in place prior to independence. [6] A
significant one emerged from the Round Table Conference of June 1932, when the
Prime Minister of Britain, Ramsay MacDonald, proposed the Communal Award,
according to which separate representation was to be provided
for Muslims, Sikhs, Indian Christians, Anglo-Indians, and Europeans. The depressed
classes, roughly corresponding to the STs and SCs, were assigned a number of seats
to be filled by election from constituencies in which only they could vote, although they
could also vote in other seats. The proposal was controversial: Mahatma Gandhi fasted
in protest against it but many among the depressed classes, including B. R. Ambedkar,
favored it. After negotiations, Gandhi reached an agreement with Ambedkar to have a
single Hindu electorate, with Dalits having seats reserved within it. Electorates for other
religions, such as Islam and Sikhism, remained separate. This became known as
the Poona Pact.[7]
After independence[edit]
After the independence of India in 1947 there were some major initiatives in favor of the
STs, SCs and after the 1980s in favour of OBCs.(Other Backward Castes) and in 2019
for poor in the upper caste category . The country's affirmative action program was
launched in 1950 and is the oldest such programme in the world. [8]
A common form of caste discrimination in India was the practice of untouchability. SCs
were the primary targets of the practice, which was outlawed by the new Constitution of
India.[9]
In 1954, the Ministry of Education suggested that 20 percent of places should be
reserved for the SCs and STs in educational institutions with a provision to relax
minimum qualifying marks for admission by 5 percent wherever required. In 1982, it was
specified that 15 percent and 7.5 percent of vacancies in public sector and government-
aided educational institutes should be reserved for the SC and ST candidates,
respectively.[10]
A significant change began in 1979 when the Mandal Commission or the Socially and
Educationally Backward Classes (SEBC) Commission was established to assess the
situation of the socially and educationally backward classes. [11] The commission did not
have exact population figures for the OBCs and so used data from the 1931 census,
thus estimating the group's population at 52 per cent. [12] In 1980 the commission's report
recommended that a reserved quota for OBCs of 27 per cent should apply in respect of
services and public sector bodies operated by the Union Government. It called for a
similar change to admissions to institutes of higher education, except where states
already had more generous requirements.[11] It was not until the 1990s that the
recommendations were implemented in Union Government jobs. [13] In 2019 the
government announces the 10% reservation in educational institutions and government
jobs for economically weaker section of upper caste category.

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