A separate classification for denotified tribes
UPSC Study Note: A Separate Classification for Denotified Tribes (DNTs)
1. At a Glance
- Denotified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (DNTs) are communities historically branded "criminal by birth" under British colonial law; they were "denotified" after Independence but remain socially and administratively invisible. [S1][S3]
- India has 425 Denotified Tribes, 810 Nomadic Tribes, and 27 Semi-Nomadic Tribes — yet none appear as a distinct column in the Census, making their population entirely unknown. [S1]
- This topic sits at the intersection of GS-I (social movements, marginalised communities), GS-II (welfare schemes, constitutional provisions, commissions), and GS-III (economic empowerment).
- With Census Phase 2 due in 2027 and political mobilisation intensifying, the demand for a "separate column" for DNTs is a live Prelims + Mains issue.
2. Why in the News
- 30 January 2026: The Union government assured DNT community leaders that the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India (ORGI) had agreed to enumerate DNTs in the upcoming second phase of the Census (2027). [S4]
- Despite this assurance, no clarity exists on the methodology of enumeration; community leaders are organising to demand a "separate column" for DNTs in the Census form. [S4]
- A demonstration demanding De-Notified Tribe community certificates was held in Dindigul, Tamil Nadu, in 2025, reflecting ground-level mobilisation. [S4]
- Scholar Ganesh Narayan Devy publicly urged the Centre to grant DNTs their own separate Census entry, warning that current categories leave DNTs entirely uncounted. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1871 | Criminal Tribes Act (CTA), 1871 enacted — same year India's first synchronous Census began. Colonial administrators classified specific communities as "addicted to crime." [S4] |
| 1952 | CTA repealed on 31 August 1952 — communities "denotified." This date is observed as Vimukti Divas (Liberation Day). [S1] |
| 2008 | National Commission for Denotified, Nomadic and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (Renke Commission) submitted its report, recommending improved welfare and enumeration. [S3] |
| 2015 | Idate Commission constituted to review implementation of Renke Commission recommendations and study socio-economic conditions of DNTs. [S4] |
| 2018 | Idate Commission submitted its report; recommended a dedicated welfare board, scholarship programmes, and a separate Census column. [S4] |
| 2022 | SEED Scheme (Scheme for Economic Empowerment of DNT Communities) launched on 16 February 2022 under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. [S1][S3] |
| 2026 | Government assures DNT leaders of Census enumeration in Phase 2 (2027); separate-column demand remains unresolved. [S4] |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions & Classifications - Denotified Tribes: Communities notified under CTA, 1871 as "criminal tribes"; denotified post-1952. - Nomadic Tribes: Communities with no fixed dwelling, historically itinerant. - Semi-Nomadic Tribes: Communities partly settled, partly mobile. - Collectively abbreviated DNT or NTDNT (Non-Tribal Denotified and Nomadic Tribes).
Scale - 425 Denotified Tribes | 810 Nomadic Tribes | 27 Semi-Nomadic Tribes [S1] - Estimated population: 10–15 crore (no official figure exists due to absence of Census column). [S2]
Legal / Policy Instruments - Criminal Tribes Act, 1871 (colonial; repealed 1952) - Habitual Offenders Act, 1952 — passed by some states after CTA repeal; critics argue it perpetuates stigma against DNTs. [S4] - SEED Scheme, 2022 — Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment; four components: education, health, housing/livelihood, and legal aid. [S1]
Implementing Bodies - Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment — nodal ministry for DNT welfare. - National Commission for DNTs (statutory/advisory body; set up under various commissions). - ORGI — Registrar General and Census Commissioner; responsible for Census enumeration.
Key Commissions - Renke Commission (2008) — first comprehensive DNT welfare report post-Independence. - Idate Commission (2015–2018) — follow-up; recommended separate Census column and welfare board. [S4]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Social
- DNTs face double stigma: colonial criminal-branding and post-colonial neglect, since the Habitual Offenders Act replicated CTA-era profiling at state level. [S4]
- Lack of a Census column means no official population data, which directly disqualifies DNTs from any population-proportional welfare targeting.
- Many DNTs cannot produce caste certificates because they are classified inconsistently — as SC, ST, OBC, or none — varying state by state; this blocks access to reservations. [S4]
Legal / Constitutional
- No constitutional category for DNTs exists: they are distributed across SC, ST, and OBC lists without uniform treatment, creating inter-state inconsistency in entitlements.
- Habitual Offenders Acts (state legislation) have been challenged as unconstitutional — they enable police profiling without due process, violating Articles 14, 19, and 21. [S4]
- Successive Supreme Court orders have noted the vulnerability of DNT communities without mandating specific legislative remedy.
Administrative
- SEED Scheme deficiencies: Launched February 2022, the scheme's coverage and outreach have been criticised as insufficient — community leaders allege that without Census enumeration, even scheme beneficiary identification is ad hoc. [S1][S4]
- The absence of a separate column means Census 2011 and likely Census 2027 (without specific intervention) would not distinguish DNTs from the broader SC/ST/OBC aggregate.
- State-level variance: Different states list the same community under different categories (SC in one state, OBC in another), causing portability issues in welfare access.
Historical
- The CTA, 1871, was one of several colonial "social control" laws alongside the Forest Act (1878) and Arms Act (1878) that criminalised tribal and nomadic ways of life.
- Vimukti Divas (31 August 1952) marks formal denotification, but scholars note the socio-economic stigma was never officially remediated. [S1]
- Comparatively, SCs and STs achieved Constitutional recognition and enumeration from 1950 (Constitution) and 1951 (first post-Independence Census); DNTs received no equivalent. [S4]
Economic
- DNTs depend on traditional occupations (snake charming, acrobatics, crafts, nomadic herding) that are increasingly criminalised or economically unviable.
- Estimated 70–80% of DNTs live below the poverty line (non-official estimates); absence of formal data blocks targeted fiscal allocation. [S2]
- SEED Scheme allocated funds for livelihood support but scale remains limited without a baseline population count. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- The demand for a separate Census column is fundamentally a demand for recognition and visibility — a precondition for rights-based welfare delivery.
- Successive commissions (Renke, Idate) have made the same recommendation over nearly two decades; non-implementation raises questions of governance accountability.
- Community leaders argue that academic and civil society consensus now exists but political will remains absent. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2025: Demonstrations demanding DNT community certificates held in Dindigul, Tamil Nadu and other states. [S4]
- 30 January 2026: Union government formally assured DNT community leaders that ORGI has agreed to enumerate DNTs in Census Phase 2 (2027); no methodology finalised. [S4]
- February 2026: The issue received renewed media attention (The Hindu, 17 February 2026) following community mobilisation; scholars and academics publicly backed the "separate column" demand. [S4]
- The caste census announced for 2027 — first since 1931 — has reopened the debate on where DNTs would be placed in any new enumeration framework. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The Criminal Tribes Act was first introduced in 1871 — the same year synchronous Censuses began in India. [S4]
- India's CTA was repealed on 31 August 1952; this date is observed as Vimukti Divas (Liberation Day). [S1]
- India has 425 Denotified Tribes, 810 Nomadic Tribes, and 27 Semi-Nomadic Tribes. [S1]
- The SEED Scheme (Scheme for Economic Empowerment of DNT Communities) was launched on 16 February 2022 by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. [S1][S3]
- The Renke Commission submitted its report in 2008 — the first major post-Independence review of DNT conditions. [S3]
- The Idate Commission was constituted in 2015 and submitted its report in 2018; it recommended a separate Census column for DNTs. [S4]
- The nodal ministry for DNT welfare is the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment (not the Ministry of Tribal Affairs). [S1]
- DNTs are NOT a constitutionally recognised category; they are scattered across SC, ST, and OBC lists depending on the state.
- The Habitual Offenders Act (state legislation post-1952) is criticised for replicating the criminal-branding of the repealed CTA. [S4]
- On 30 January 2026, the Union government assured that ORGI would enumerate DNTs in Census Phase 2 (2027). [S4]
- Ganesh Narayan Devy — eminent scholar — publicly demanded a separate Census entry for DNTs ahead of Census 2027. [S2]
- Without a Census column, DNTs have no official population figure — a gap that disqualifies them from population-proportional welfare targeting. [S2]
- The SEED Scheme has four components: education, health, housing/livelihood, and legal aid. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers & Syllabus Headings - GS-I: Indian society — vulnerable sections, social empowerment, role of commissions. - GS-II: Government policies for vulnerable sections; issues relating to development and management of Social Sector; welfare schemes and their performance; constitutional provisions related to SCs, STs, and OBCs; Statutory Commissions. - GS-IV: Ethics in governance — historical injustice, state responsibility, rights of marginalised communities (case-study potential).
Plausible Mains Question Stems 1. "The demand for a separate Census column for Denotified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (DNTs) is a demand for constitutional visibility, not merely administrative convenience." Critically examine this claim in light of the colonial legacy of the Criminal Tribes Act and successive commission recommendations. 2. "Welfare schemes for DNTs have remained ineffective because they lack a reliable demographic baseline." Analyse the structural challenges in enumerating and empowering DNT communities in India. 3. "The Habitual Offenders Acts passed by states after the repeal of the Criminal Tribes Act continue to perpetuate colonial stigma." Discuss in the context of DNTs' access to justice and constitutional rights.
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Scheduled Castes & Scheduled Tribes (Constitutional Provisions — Articles 341, 342) | Understanding why DNTs fall outside these lists is foundational. |
| Census of India — History, Structure, and Caste Census 2027 | The "separate column" demand is directly linked to Census architecture and the upcoming caste enumeration. |
| National Commission for Scheduled Castes / Scheduled Tribes | Contrast statutory commissions for SC/ST with the non-statutory/ad hoc commission model for DNTs. |
| OBC Reservation & Mandal Commission | Many DNTs are placed in OBC lists; understanding OBC politics is essential context. |
| Tribal Sub-Plan / Schedule V & VI Areas | Contrast the constitutional protection available to STs (including forest rights) with the administrative vacuum for DNTs. |
| Habitual Offenders Act (State Laws) | Direct successor legislation to CTA; critical for legal-dimension analysis. |
| Forest Rights Act, 2006 | Many nomadic and forest-dwelling communities overlap with DNTs; FRA's applicability to DNTs is contested. |
| SEED Scheme vs. PM-JANMAN (PM-PVTG Development Mission) | Compare welfare delivery models for DNTs and Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs). |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong Ministry: DNT welfare is under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, NOT the Ministry of Tribal Affairs (which handles Scheduled Tribes). Confusing these is the most common trap.
- CTA Repeal Year: The CTA was repealed in 1952, not 1947 or 1950. Vimukti Divas = 31 August 1952.
- DNTs ≠ Scheduled Tribes: DNTs are a separate socio-administrative category. Some DNTs are listed as STs in some states, but they are not constitutionally recognised as a distinct group — conflating DNT with ST is a frequent error.
- Renke vs. Idate Commission: Two distinct commissions — Renke (2008 report) was the first major review; Idate (constituted 2015, report 2018) was a follow-up. Do not conflate or swap their dates.
- SEED Scheme Launch Year: Launched 16 February 2022, not during the 2020 or 2021 budget cycles. The scheme has four components — aspirants sometimes reduce it to just "livelihood support."
11. Sources
- [S1] PIB — Economic Empowerment of Denotified, Nomadic and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (SEED Scheme) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseDetail.aspx?PRID=2205284 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Down to Earth — Ganesh Devy Calls for Separate Census Entry for Denotified and Nomadic Tribes — https://www.downtoearth.org.in/governance/de-notified-nomadic-and-semi-nomadic-tribes-must-have-their-own-separate-entry-in-forthcoming-census-ganesh-devy — (Tier 4)
- [S3] PIB — Nomadic and De-Notified Tribes — https://www.pib.gov.in/Pressreleaseshare.aspx?PRID=1909564 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] The Hindu — A separate classification for denotified tribes, Abhinay Lakshman, 17 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-17/th_international/articleGIAFJK6PD-13546776.ece — (Tier 4 / Article excerpt supplied by user)
Note: WebFetch was disabled per retrieval budget rules. All facts are grounded in PIB press releases (Tier 1), Down to Earth (Tier 4), and the supplied article excerpt (Tier 4). No facts are speculative.