Rethinking tribal women’s inheritance rights
Rethinking Tribal Women's Inheritance Rights — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Core issue: Tribal women in India are denied equal property-inheritance rights because the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 (HSA) explicitly excludes Scheduled Tribes (STs) under Section 2(2), leaving them governed by customary laws that overwhelmingly deny women absolute ownership of ancestral property.
- Constitutional tension: This exclusion sits in conflict with Articles 14, 15, and 21 (equality, non-discrimination, right to life with dignity) and with Article 366(25), which defines Scheduled Tribes.
- Why UPSC-relevant: Intersects GS-I (society/tribal issues), GS-II (constitutional rights, judicial review, welfare legislation), and GS-IV (ethics of customary practices vs. fundamental rights). A live SC verdict (Oct 2025) and a pending legislative gap make this a high-probability topic. [S1][S2]
- Policy vacuum: No Central Government notification extending HSA to STs has ever been issued — leaving ~8% of India's population (STs) in a legal grey zone on succession. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- October 8, 2025 — A Supreme Court Bench of Justices Sanjay Karol and Prashant Kumar Mishra delivered a verdict reaffirming that the HSA cannot be applied to Scheduled Tribes under any circumstances, closing a decade-long judicial inconsistency around "Hinduisation." [S1]
- Parallel ruling (July 2025) — In Ram Charan & Ors. v. Sukhram & Ors. (2025 INSC 865), the Supreme Court granted equal inheritance rights to the legal heirs of a tribal woman (Dhaiya, daughter of Bhajju alias Bhanjan Gond), holding that in the absence of proven custom or codified law, principles of justice, equity, and good conscience must prevail. [S2]
- Both rulings together have renewed calls for a dedicated tribal succession law — a legislative gap that Parliament has not filled since 1956. [S1][S3]
- The article by Shalini Saboo (Junior Fellow, Centre for Contemporary Studies, PM Museum and Library, Teen Murti House, New Delhi), published 24 February 2026 in The Hindu, crystallised the public discourse around whether a new stand-alone statute is needed. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1956 | Hindu Succession Act enacted; Section 2(2) expressly excludes members of Scheduled Tribes unless the Central Government notifies otherwise. |
| 1956 onward | Tribal inheritance governed by customary law — largely patrilineal, denying women absolute property rights. |
| 2005 | Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act grants daughters equal coparcenary rights in ancestral property — but Section 2(2) exclusion for STs left untouched. |
| Pre-2025 | SC inconsistency: some benches granted inheritance rights to tribal women who had "Hinduised" (adopted Hindu customs); others upheld customary exclusion. |
| July 2025 | Ram Charan v. Sukhram (2025 INSC 865): SC applies equity/good conscience test; tribal woman's heirs get equal share. [S2] |
| October 8, 2025 | SC Bench (Karol + Mishra JJ.) reaffirms: HSA inapplicable to STs under any circumstances, ending Hinduisation-route jurisprudence. [S1] |
| Feb 2026 | Academic commentary calls for a new sui generis tribal succession legislation. [S1] |
Predecessor/related frameworks: - Indian Succession Act, 1925 — also does not cover tribal communities by default. - Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Constitution — protect tribal autonomy and customary practices; any legislation must negotiate these protections. - ILO Convention No. 169 (1989, not ratified by India) — calls on states to respect indigenous peoples' customs while ensuring gender equality; cited in academic discourse. [S4]
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions & Key Terms
- Scheduled Tribes (STs): Communities notified under Article 342 of the Constitution; defined in Article 366(25). Characteristics — primitiveness, geographical isolation, shyness of contact, distinct culture, backwardness.
- Customary Law: Uncodified, community-specific rules governing marriage, inheritance, and land; recognised by courts unless repugnant to justice/morality.
- Hinduisation: Judicial doctrine (now effectively closed) under which a tribal woman who adopted Hindu customs could claim HSA-based inheritance rights.
- Section 2(2), HSA 1956: "Nothing contained in this Act shall apply to the members of any Scheduled Tribe within the meaning of clause (25) of Article 366 of the Constitution unless the Central Government, by notification in the Official Gazette, otherwise directs."
- Justice, Equity, and Good Conscience Test: English-derived common-law principle applied by Indian courts when no codified or customary rule exists; now confirmed applicable to tribal succession by SC 2025. [S2]
Institutional Framework
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Nodal Ministry | Ministry of Tribal Affairs (for tribal welfare legislation) |
| Parent legislation | Hindu Succession Act, 1956 (MoLJ) |
| Enabling notification authority | Central Government (not State Governments) |
| Constitutional provisions | Arts. 14, 15, 21, 46, 244, 342, 366(25); Fifth & Sixth Schedules |
| International instrument | ILO Convention 169 (not ratified by India) [S4] |
Key Numbers
- STs constitute approximately 8.6% of India's population (Census 2011; ~104 million persons).
- No notification under Section 2(2) HSA has ever been issued by any Central Government since 1956.
- Fifth Schedule covers 10 States; Sixth Schedule covers tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Section 2(2) HSA creates a structural exclusion: the very statute that empowers Hindu women (including post-2005 amendments giving daughters coparcenary rights) is constitutionally ring-fenced away from STs. [S3]
- SC's Oct 2025 ruling closes the "Hinduisation" escape valve — previously, courts used it to extend HSA benefits on a case-by-case basis, but the bench held this was legally untenable. [S1]
- Tension with Article 15(1) (no discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth): denying tribal daughters the same rights as non-tribal daughters arguably constitutes caste/tribe-based discrimination. [S3]
- The Fifth and Sixth Schedules were designed to protect tribal autonomy — but they can also entrench patriarchal customary norms, creating a constitutional contradiction between autonomy (Art. 244) and equality (Art. 14/15).
Social / Gender
- Customary laws of most tribal communities are patrilineal and deny women absolute property rights; widows may receive usufruct (use rights) but not ownership. [S1]
- Tribal women's landlessness feeds cycles of poverty, domestic violence, and economic dependency — land ownership is linked to agency and security for rural women.
- "Hinduisation" as a coping mechanism was inherently unfair: tribal women had to renounce their cultural identity to gain a property right that non-tribal women received automatically. [S1]
- Any legislative reform must balance gender justice (women's inheritance rights) with cultural rights (tribal community autonomy over customary law).
Administrative / Governance
- A dedicated tribal succession law would require consultation with tribal communities under constitutional conventions and potentially Gram Sabha consent in Fifth Schedule areas.
- Enforcement in remote tribal belts would require land-records modernisation and community-level legal literacy — both significant administrative challenges.
- Fragmentation of jurisdiction: State-specific customary laws vary widely (Santals, Gonds, Bhils, Nagas etc. each have distinct inheritance customs), making a uniform national law difficult to draft without being over-broad or under-inclusive.
Historical
- The HSA 1956 itself was a reform statute: it overrode Hindu personal law's Mitakshara/Dayabhaga distinctions to give women more rights — yet it built the ST exclusion in at inception, reflecting mid-20th century deference to tribal autonomy.
- The 2005 amendment (equating daughters with sons as coparceners) was a landmark for Hindu women but widened the gap between tribal and non-tribal women's legal status.
- Post-colonial India's approach to tribal law has oscillated between assimilationism (applying national laws) and legal pluralism (preserving customary regimes); the SC's 2025 clarity forces a legislative choice.
Ethical / Governance
- Using "Hinduisation" as a gateway to rights is ethically problematic: it conditions a universal right (property inheritance) on cultural assimilation, penalising cultural fidelity.
- A new statute should ideally follow a rights-based, consultative approach consistent with UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP, 2007) — which India voted in favour of. [S4]
- There is a governance accountability gap: Parliament has had 70 years to issue a notification under Section 2(2) or pass standalone legislation and has done neither.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- July 2025 — SC decides Ram Charan & Ors. v. Sukhram & Ors. (2025 INSC 865): heirs of tribal woman Dhaiya awarded equal share in grandfather Bhajju Gond's property; SC applies justice-equity-good conscience test and calls on Central Government to consider amending Section 2(2). [S2]
- October 8, 2025 — SC Bench (Justices Sanjay Karol & Prashant Kumar Mishra) definitively rules: HSA cannot apply to Scheduled Tribes under any circumstances; "Hinduisation" doctrine cannot override Section 2(2) exclusion. [S1]
- February 24, 2026 — The Hindu publishes opinion piece by Shalini Saboo (PM Museum & Library) arguing for a dedicated tribal succession legislation to fill the legislative vacuum exposed by the two 2025 SC rulings. [S1]
- No Central Government notification under Section 2(2) HSA has been issued as of June 2026; no Bill introduced in Parliament as yet.
7. Prelims Hooks
- Section 2(2) of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 excludes members of Scheduled Tribes from its operation unless the Central Government issues a notification in the Official Gazette. [S3]
- Scheduled Tribes are defined under Article 366(25) and notified under Article 342 of the Constitution. [S3]
- The 2005 amendment to the HSA gave daughters equal coparcenary rights in ancestral property — but Section 2(2) exclusion of STs was not removed. [S3]
- On October 8, 2025, the SC (Justices Sanjay Karol + Prashant Kumar Mishra) held that HSA cannot apply to STs under any circumstances, closing the "Hinduisation" route. [S1]
- In Ram Charan v. Sukhram (2025 INSC 865), SC applied the justice, equity, and good conscience test to grant tribal woman's heirs inheritance rights in the absence of codified law or proven custom. [S2]
- No Central Government notification extending HSA to any Scheduled Tribe community has ever been issued since 1956. [S3]
- Tribal areas under the Fifth Schedule cover 10 States; Sixth Schedule covers Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. [S3]
- India voted in favour of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) in 2007 but has not ratified ILO Convention No. 169. [S4]
- "Hinduisation" — the doctrine under which tribal women who adopted Hindu customs were granted HSA-based rights — was effectively ended by the SC Oct 2025 ruling. [S1]
- The Indian Succession Act, 1925 also does not automatically cover tribal communities — leaving tribal succession in a dual legislative gap. [S3]
- Article 46 of the Constitution (DPSP) mandates the State to promote with special care the educational and economic interests of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. [S3]
- The Ministry of Tribal Affairs is the nodal ministry for tribal welfare legislation and policy in India. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-I: Indian society; role of women; social empowerment; tribal communities. - GS-II: Parliament and State Legislatures; judicial review; welfare legislation; rights of minorities and vulnerable groups; constitutional provisions (Arts. 14, 15, 21, 244, 342). - GS-IV: Ethics — conflict between customary practices and universal rights; gender justice vs. cultural autonomy.
Syllabus Headings: - GS-I: "Salient features of Indian Society, Diversity of India; Role of women and women's organisation; effects of globalisation on Indian society." - GS-II: "Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation."
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Supreme Court's 2025 rulings on tribal women's inheritance have exposed a 70-year legislative vacuum. Critically examine the constitutional tensions between cultural autonomy of Scheduled Tribes and gender equality, and suggest a balanced legislative framework." (GS-II/GS-I) 2. "Customary law in tribal communities, though protected under the Fifth and Sixth Schedules, often perpetuates gender discrimination. Should India enact a uniform tribal succession code? Discuss the merits, limitations, and safeguards such a law must incorporate." (GS-II) 3. "Comment on the doctrine of 'justice, equity, and good conscience' as applied by Indian courts to tribal succession disputes. How does this compare with the rights guaranteed under UNDRIP?" (GS-II/GS-IV)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Hindu Succession Act, 1956 and 2005 Amendment | Direct statutory context; understand what tribal women are excluded from and what non-tribal daughters gained. |
| Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Constitution | Governs tribal autonomy and the legislative space for customary law protection — essential to understand why reform is complex. |
| UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP, 2007) | International normative framework; India's endorsement creates a soft-law obligation around tribal women's rights. |
| Forest Rights Act, 2006 (Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers Act) | Closely related land-rights legislation; interacts with inheritance questions since forest land tenure is central to tribal economy. |
| Personal Law Reforms in India (Shah Bano, Triple Talaq, Uniform Civil Code debate) | Provides comparative jurisprudential context for State intervention in community-specific personal laws. |
| Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (PESA) | Gram Sabha powers in Fifth Schedule areas; any tribal succession law would need to engage PESA's self-governance framework. |
| Article 15(3) and (4) — Special Provisions for Women and STs | Enables affirmative legislation; understanding the constitutional permission for differentiated law. |
| ILO Convention No. 169 (Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention) | Not ratified by India but widely referenced; gap between India's international posture and domestic practice. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing "notification" power: Only the Central Government (not State governments) can extend HSA to STs via a notification under Section 2(2). A common error is assuming States can do this independently.
- Treating the 2005 HSA amendment as covering STs: The amendment gave daughters coparcenary rights — but the Section 2(2) exclusion was not removed; tribal daughters did not benefit from 2005 changes.
- Conflating Fifth and Sixth Schedules: Fifth Schedule → 10 States (largely central India); Sixth Schedule → Northeast tribal areas (Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram). Different governance mechanisms apply.
- Assuming India ratified ILO Convention 169: India has not ratified it. India voted in favour of UNDRIP (2007) — a non-binding declaration — but these are legally distinct. Do not conflate endorsement of UNDRIP with ratification of ILO 169.
- Overstating the Oct 2025 SC ruling as granting rights: The Oct 8, 2025 ruling reaffirmed exclusion of STs from HSA. It was the July 2025 ruling (Ram Charan) that granted inheritance rights — on the narrower ground of equity/good conscience where no custom was proven. Conflating these two rulings is a classic trap.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Rethinking tribal women's inheritance rights" — Shalini Saboo, The Hindu, 24 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-24/th_international/articleGTPFKLOBV-13632164.ece — (Tier 4 — Article content as primary source)
- [S2] "SC Grants Equal Property Rights to Tribal Woman's Heirs" — The LawGist (citing Ram Charan & Ors. v. Sukhram & Ors., 2025 INSC 865) — https://thelawgist.org/supreme-court-tribal-women-inheritance-equality-2025/ — (Tier 4 / judicial record)
- [S3] "The Supreme Court Upholds Non-Applicability of HSA 1956 to Scheduled Tribes Without Notification" — CaseMine / Lexology analysis of Section 2(2) and constitutional provisions — https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=8d04bf1b-6d53-4196-ac4c-7431f33a23c0 — (Tier 4 / legal commentary)
- [S4] ILO Convention No. 169 (Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989) and UNDRIP (2007) — referenced via academic discourse and ILO documentation — https://www.ilo.org — (Tier 2)
Note: No Tier 1 government portal (pib.gov.in, legislative.gov.in etc.) returned a directly retrievable snippet on this specific topic within the search budget. Facts are grounded in the provided article (Tier 4 primary source) and judicial/legal commentary corroborating the two 2025 SC rulings. Aspirants should cross-check the exact case citations via the Supreme Court's official website (sci.gov.in) when available.