Tribal Affairs Ministry set to revamp forest rights cells, form ‘one-stop’ coordinating units


Study Note: Tribal Affairs Ministry — Revamp of FRA Cells & 'One-Stop' PMUs


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2006 Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 enacted — recognises forest rights of STs and OTFDs. [S3]
2008 FRA Rules notified; Gram Sabha empowered as primary authority for claims.
2023 (Oct 31) 23.43 lakh land titles covering over 1.8 crore acres distributed cumulatively. [S5]
Oct 2024 Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan (DAJGUA) launched; FRA Cells funded as part of this scheme. [S4]
June 2025 Ministry had sanctioned 324 district-level FRA Cells in 18 States/UTs and 17 State-level cells. [S1]
Feb 4, 2026 Review meeting — decision to convert FRA Cells to one-stop PMUs. [S1]
Late Feb 2026 Odisha closes FRA cells in 50 sub-divisions; Chhattisgarh evaluates PMU structure. [S1]

Predecessors/Context: Before FRA Cells, implementation depended entirely on existing district administration with no dedicated staffing. The FRA cell model was itself a first-of-its-kind centrally-funded HR support mechanism for a rights law. [S4]


4. Core Static Facts

The Forest Rights Act, 2006 - Full title: Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Tribal Affairs (monitoring); State governments execute. [S3] - Recognises two categories of claimants: (i) Forest Dwelling Scheduled Tribes (FDSTs) and (ii) Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (OTFDs) — OTFDs must prove 75-year residency. [S3] - Two types of rights: (i) Individual Forest Rights (IFR) — land up to 4 hectares; (ii) Community Forest Rights (CFR) — over community forest resources. [S3] - Gram Sabha is the primary authority to receive, verify, and forward claims. [S3]

DAJGUA Programme - Full name: Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan - Launched: October 2024 [S4] - Funding modality: Grants-in-aid (centrally funded) [S4] - FRA Cells funded under DAJGUA to provide additional human resources to States.

FRA Cell Structure (as sanctioned)

Level Staffing
State-level Cell Programme Coordinator (FRA), IT/Data Expert, MIS Assistant (FRA) — 3 persons
District/Sub-Division Cell Coordinator (FRA) + MIS/FRA Associate — 2 persons

Implementation Data (as of 31 May 2025) - Total claims filed at Gram Sabha level: 51,23,104 (49,11,495 individual + 2,11,609 community) [S3] - Total titles distributed: 25,11,375 (49.02%) (23,89,670 individual + 1,21,705 community) [S3] - States/UTs implementing FRA: 20 States + 1 UT [S3] - FRA Cells sanctioned (as of June 2025): 324 district-level in 18 States/UTs + 17 State-level cells [S1]

New PMU Structure - Project Monitoring Units (PMUs): 'one-stop' coordinating units at State/UT level [S1] - Mandate expanded beyond FRA to cover all policy matters of the Ministry [S1] - Replaces the siloed FRA-only cell model [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Social / Tribal

Environmental

Economic


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. FRA Cells were funded under the Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan (DAJGUA) programme launched in October 2024. [S4]
  2. As of June 2025, the Ministry had sanctioned 324 district-level FRA Cells in 18 States/UTs and 17 State-level cells. [S1]
  3. FRA Cells are to be replaced by Project Monitoring Units (PMUs) — 'one-stop' units covering all Ministry policies, not just the FRA. [S1]
  4. The decision to form PMUs was taken at a review meeting on February 4, 2026. [S1]
  5. As of May 31, 2025: total claims filed under FRA = 51,23,104; titles distributed = 25,11,375 (49.02%). [S3]
  6. The Forest Rights Act, 2006 recognises rights of (i) Forest Dwelling Scheduled Tribes and (ii) Other Traditional Forest Dwellers — OTFDs require 75-year generational residency proof. [S3]
  7. Individual Forest Rights (IFR) under FRA are capped at 4 hectares per household. [S3]
  8. Gram Sabha is the first authority under FRA for receiving and verifying claims — not the district collector or forest officer. [S3]
  9. FRA is implemented in 20 States and 1 UT; monitoring is by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs. [S3]
  10. Odisha ordered closure of FRA cells in 50 sub-divisions in February 2026 as part of the PMU revamp. [S1]
  11. FRA Cells at district level comprised 2 hired persons: Coordinator (FRA) and MIS/FRA Associate. [S4]
  12. State-level FRA Cells comprised 3 hired persons: Programme Coordinator, IT/Data Expert, and MIS Assistant. [S4]
  13. By October 31, 2023: 23.43 lakh land titles covering over 1.8 crore acres distributed cumulatively under FRA. [S5]
  14. Community Forest Rights titles distributed (as of May 2025): 1,21,705 — significantly fewer than 2,11,609 community claims filed. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; Statutory bodies; Centre-State relations; Federalism. - GS-III: Land reforms; Forest governance; Environment and ecology.

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes. - Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to forests. - Devolution of rights and strengthening of grassroots democracy.

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Forest Rights Act, 2006 remains substantially unimplemented nearly two decades after enactment. Critically examine the institutional bottlenecks and suggest how the proposed Project Monitoring Units can address them."

  2. "The Ministry of Tribal Affairs' decision to replace dedicated FRA Cells with multi-purpose Project Monitoring Units raises concerns about dilution of tribal rights focus. Comment, with reference to the constitutional framework for Scheduled Tribes."

  3. "Community Forest Rights under the Forest Rights Act are significantly under-recognised compared to Individual Forest Rights. Discuss the reasons and implications for biodiversity governance in India."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (PESA) Gram Sabha powers under PESA complement FRA's gram sabha-centred adjudication model.
Fifth Schedule and Sixth Schedule of the Constitution Constitutional basis for tribal area governance; FRA flows from these provisions.
Van Dhan Vikas Kendras (VDVKs) Ministry of Tribal Affairs' livelihood programme often co-located with FRA beneficiaries.
DAJGUA Programme Parent programme under which FRA Cells were created — full scheme details, budget, and convergence needed.
Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act, 2016 (CAMPA) Forest diversion for development projects intersects with FRA rights; CAMPA funds compensatory planting.
Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 vs FRA Classic conflict — core critical tiger habitats vs community rights; multiple Supreme Court cases.
Gram Sabha Powers under FRA Gram Sabha is central; understand its quorum, voting, and override conditions.
Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (OTFDs) Often confused with STs; separate evidentiary standard (75-year residence) — frequently tested.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong implementing agency: FRA is monitored by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, but implemented by State governments. Do not confuse with MoEFCC (Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change), which administers forest laws separately.

  2. DAJGUA vs PM-JANMAN: Both are tribal welfare schemes launched around 2023–24. PM-JANMAN targets Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs); DAJGUA is broader, covering all tribal gram sabhas and funding FRA Cells. Do not conflate.

  3. 4-hectare ceiling applies only to IFR: The 4-hectare limit is for Individual Forest Rights; there is no fixed ceiling for Community Forest Rights — a common MCQ trap.

  4. Gram Sabha ≠ Gram Panchayat: Under FRA, the Gram Sabha (all adult village members) is the competent authority — not the elected Gram Panchayat body. Critical constitutional distinction.

  5. FRA Cells are not statutory bodies: They are administrative support units funded via Grants-in-aid under DAJGUA — not mandated by the FRA itself. Their closure/replacement does not require legislative amendment, only executive/administrative action.


11. Sources