equality of ‘groups’.
When the Indian constitution was being written between the years 1947 and 1950, it became clear to the founding fathers of the new Indian state that India could hardly call itself a democracy – or even call some of its people citizens – if it did not work out some mechanism to diminish the massive social, economic and indeed psychological disabilities of the electorate.
It was therefore decided that a system of reservations in government institutions amounting to 23 percent of the total would be put into place for the untouchables (‘scheduled castes’ or SCs) and tribals (‘scheduled tribes’ or STs), who had suffered the greatest disadvantages in the traditional social order.
This system of affirmative action was supposed to last only a decade – until 1960 – but, of course, nothing of the sort happened.
Instead over the decades, the beneficiaries of reservation not only claimed what was offered by the state, but also organised themselves politically on caste-based platforms.
And at the same time, it became apparent that there were many other disadvantageous communities in India who were not covered by the old policy and were now indignant that they found themselves in a kind of limbo between the higher castes and the beneficiaries of affirmative action.
A review of the system in the 1980s led to the emergence of a vast new, but nebulous, category called the ‘other backward classes’ and the extension of another 27 percent of posts in the government to be reserved for OBCs.
In the following quarter a century, the OBC has become a favourite word of the political classes who have seen it as a way of providing political patronage to entire communities for electoral gain.
Simultaneously, there has been much resentment in India among youth belonging to the middle and higher castes that they themselves are now being marginalised, even if meritorious, and squeezed out of a system where it is no longer high-caste status, but coming from a disadvantageous caste, that allows access to social goods.
Banal though it may seem on its own terms, what the Patel protests reveals is that some instruments of social justice that are more nuanced, carefully targeted, and evidence-based than a quota system – based unidimensionally on caste – will soon be required in India.
This article has been excerpted from: ‘Affirmative action for all in India’. Courtesy: Aljazeera.com