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Demography, the word was first used by the Frenchman, A. Guillard in his textbook “elements de statistique Humaine”.
Demography has been derived from two Greek words viz, ‘Demos’ ‘Graphy’, ‘Demos’ means people and ‘graphy’ means to draw or write something.
Demography is an observational ‘science’ in which data are continuously generated by different demographic processes. Major sources of demographic data are:
i) Population census ii) Vital registration system and registers iii) Sample surveys, and iv) Administrative records.
The first census, that had an all-India character, was taken in 1872.
It was, however, a patchwork of census data taken in various parts of the country. The first regular census in India was taken in 1881.
There after, there have been regular censuses every 10 years. The 2011 census is the 15the census of India and the 6th since independence.
In India, the National Sample survey was started in 1950. It has been providing demographic data on such items as population, birth death, internal migration, employment and unemployment, morbidity, housing conditions etc.
To determine the overall errors in census enumeration post-enumeration check is done. It was started a 1951. In Post-Enumeration check, a sample of households (roughly one in a thousand) is selected and enumerated again within a month of the actual census taking. A comparison of actual census results and the results of this check gives the extent of error in a census.The Indian Census is the most credible source of information on Demography (Population characterstics), Economic Activity, Literacy and Education, Housing & Household Amenities, Urbanisation, Fertility and Mortality, Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, Language, Religion, Migration, Disability and many other socio-cultural and demographic data. This is the only source of primary data in the village ,town and ward level, It provides valuable information for planning and formulation policies for Central and the State Governments and is widely used by National and International Agencies, Scholars, business people, industrialists, and many more.
The Delimitation/reservation of Constituencies- Parliamentary/Assembly/Panchayats and other Local Bodies is also done on the basis of the demographic data thrown up by the Census. Census is te basis for reviewing the country's progress in the past decade, monitoring the ongoing Schemes of the Government and most importantly, plan for the future. That is why the Slogan is “Our Census - Our Future".
Census 2011 was held in two phases:
· Houselisting & Housing Census: (April to September 2010)
· Population Enumeration (9th to 28 February 2011)
States/Union Territories – 35
Total Districts – 640
Sub-districts – 5,924
Towns – 7,936
Villages – 6.41 lakh
More than half of the Indian population does not have a lavatory while more people own mobile phone or telephone.
"47% of the households have latrine facility within premises" while "63% households have Telephone/mobile facility," According to the census, among the 47 percent of household having bathroom, 36 percent households have water closet and 9 percent households have pit latrine. There is 11 point decline in households having no latrine from 64 percent to 53 percent in 2011.
As per the Houselisting and Housing Census 2011, released by the Ministry of Home and Affairs, "The census houses increased from 25 cr to 33cr. There is an increase of 6 cr census houses for residential and partly residential purposes. The data indicates that the housing gap has reduced".
There is an improvement in the construction material used for roof, wall and floor. Thus there is a substantial improvement in the quality of housing both in rural and urban areas.
As regards amenities available with the households, 87% of households are using tap, tube well, hand pump and covered well as the main source of drinking water while 43.5 percent use tap water.
Only 47% of households have source of water on the premises while 36% of households have to fetch water from a source located within 500 m in rural areas/100 m in urban areas and 17% still fetch drinking water from a source located more than 500 m away in rural areas or 100 m in urban area.
As far as Main source of lighting is concerned, 67% households use electricity which shows an increase of 11point over 2001. The rural-urban gap has reduced by 7 percent points from 44% in 2001 to 37%.
58% of the households have bathing facility within the premises, showing an Increase of 22 points over 2001.
Around half of the households have drainage connectivity with two-third have the open drainage and one-third has the closed drainage.
61% households have kitchen facility with 55% within premises and 6% outside premises. Two-third of the households are using firewood/crop residue, cow dung cake/coal etc. and 3% households use Kerosene. There is an increase of 11 points in use of LPG from 18% in 2001 to 29% in 2011.
In the modes of transport 45% of the household are having bicycle, 21% two wheelers and 5% four wheelers. There is an increase of 9 point in two wheelers and 2 point in four wheelers, with bicycle showing increase of 1 point only.
59% of the households are availing banking facilities with 68% in urban and 54% in rural areas. The rural urban difference has reduced from 19 to 13 point.
18% of the households do not have any of the specified assets
Communication
As regards mode of communication, there is an increase of 16 percent in television and a corresponding decline of about 15 point in use of radios/transistors.
"63% households have Telephone/mobile facility with 82% in urban and 54% in rural area. The penetration of mobile phone is 59% and landline is 10%," said the survey.
Less than 1 out of 10 households have computer/laptop with only 3 percent having internet facility. The penetration of internet is 8 percent in urban as compared to less than 1 percent in rural area.
Up to 1921, the crude death rate in India was quite high (between 40 and 50 per thousand population), the highest being for the decade 1911-21, mainly because of the influenza epidemic in 1918, when more than 15 million persons died. Since 1921, the death rate has been declining. From 1911-21 to 1971-81 that is in a period of 60 years the average annual death rate declined from 48.6 per thousand populations to 14.9 per thousand population-a reductions of more than 69 per cent. The estimates of the Sample Registration System (SRS), 2012 indicate that the Crude Death Rate (CDR) for the countryhas marginally declined to 7.0 in 2012 from 7.1 in 2011.The maximum CDR has been reported for Odisha (8.5) and the minimum for Delhi(4.2).During last five years, the decline in National CDR has been to the tune of 0.4 points. The corresponding decline in female CDR has been by 0.5 points against 0.3 points in male CDR. The Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) has also registered 2 points decline to 42 in 2012from 44 in 2011 at the National level. The maximum IMR has been observed in Madhya Pradesh (56) and the minimum in Kerala (12).During the corresponding period, Neo-natal Mortality Rate(NNMR) has declined by 2 points. IMR for the country has come down to 42 in 2012 from 55 in 2007, a decline of 13 points over last 5 years and an annual average decline of about 2.5 points. The corresponding decline in rural IMR has been to the tune of 15 points (61 in 2007 to 46 in 2012) against a decline of 9 points in urban IMR (37 in 2007 to 28in 2012). Both the gender have shown similar decline in 2007-12. Despite this decline, one in every 24 infantat the National level, one in every 22 infant in rural areas and one in every 36 infant in urban areas still die within one year of life.( SRS-2012)
As in other developing countries, the crude birth rate has been quite high in India. In the first decade of the twentieth century, the estimated birth rate for India was as high as 49.2 per thousand population. In the decade 1951-61, that is, the decade immediately following Independence, the birth rate declined by only four points, and was around 45 per thousand population. Since 1961, however, the birth rate has been progressively declining, though not at a very fast pace. According to the estimates of the sample registration system, the Crude Birth Rate (CBR) at the National level during 2012 stands at 21.6 exhibiting a decline of 0.2 points over 2011. The maximum CBR has been reported in respect of Bihar (27.7) and the minimum in respect of Kerala (14.9). There has been a decline of 1.5 points in the CBR for the country during 2007-12. The corresponding decline in rural CBR has been to the extent of 1.6 points against 1.2 points in urban CBR.
Total Fertility Rate (TFR) for the country is stable to 2.4 in 2011 and 2012. During 2012, Bihar has reported the highest TFR (3.5) while Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Tamil Nadu & West Bengal has reported the lowest TFR (1.7). It is noteworthy that the replacement level of TFR, viz 2.1, has been attained by Andhra Pradesh (1.8), Delhi (1.8), Himachal Pradesh (1.7), Jammu & Kashmir (1.9) Karnataka (1.9), Kerala (1.8), Maharashtra (1.8), Punjab (1.7), Tamil Nadu (1.7), West Bengal (1.7)& Odisha (2.1).At present, a rural woman (having a TFR of 2.6) at the National level would have about one child more than an urban woman (having a TFR of 1.8), on average.( SRS-2012)
According to the provisional results compiled quickly for the Census of India 2011, the population of India at 0:00 hours of 1 s t March, 2011, stood at 1210193422comprising of 623724248males and 586469184 females. Thus, as widely believed and expected, India became only the second country in the world after China to officially cross the one billion mark.
The population of India, which at the turn of the twentieth century, was only around 238.4 million increased by more than four times in a period of hundred years to reach 1027 million now. Interestingly, the population of India grew by one and half times in the first half of the twentieth century, while in the later half it recorded almost a phenomenal three-fold increase. India’s population growth during the twentieth century can be chartered and classified into four distinct phases as follows:
1901-1921: Stagnant population
1921-1951: Steady growth
1951-1981: Rapid high growth
1981-2011: High growth with definite signs of slowing down
During most of the nineteenth century, India witnessed a fluctuating but ultimately more or less a stagnant growth of population, which drifted into the twentieth century until 1921. Thereafter, the country passed through successively all the phases of demographic transition and is now widely believed to have entered the fifth phase, usually characterized by rapidly declining fertility. The crucial question is - how long will this phase extend and when will India achieve a stable population? The National Population Policy (NPP), 2000, recently adopted by the Government of India states that ‘the long-term objective is to achieve a stable population by 2045, at a level consistent with the requirements of sustainable economic growth, social development, and environment protection’.
The population of India has increased by more than 181 million during the decade 2001-2011. But this Census data will not have an effect on the demarcation of parliamentary constituencies because as per the 2002 amendment to Constitution there will be no delimitation till the first census after 2026.Although, the net addition in population during each decade has increased consistently, the change in net addition has shown a steady declining trend over the decades starting from 1961. While 27.9 million more people were added between the decades 1981-1991 than between 1971-1981, this number declined to 17.6 million for the decades between 1981-1991 and 1991-2001.
· Uttar Pradesh - 19,95,81,477
· Maharashtra - 11,23,72,972
· Bihar - 10,38,04,637
· West Bengal - 9,13,47,736
· Andhra Pradesh - 8,46,65,533
· Most Populous State : Uttar Pradesh
· Lakshadweep - 64,429
· Daman & Diu - 2,42,911
· D. & N. Haveli - 3,42,853
· A. & N. Islands - 3,79,944
· Sikkim - 6,07,688
· Least Populous UTs : Lakshadweep
The percentage decadal growth during 1991-2001 has registered the sharpest decline since independence. It has declined from 23.86 percent for 1981-1991 to 21.34 percent for the period 1991-2001 further to 17.6 in 2001-11. Percentage growth in 2001-2011 is 17.64 in comparison to 21.15 per cent in 2001; males 17.19 and females 18.12.2001-2011 is the first decade (with the exception of 1911-1921) which has actually added lesser population compared to the previous decade.Uttar Pradesh (199.5 million) is the most populous State in the country – population is more than the population of Brazil.
The percentage decadal growth rates of the six most populous States have declined during 2001-2011 compared to 1991-2001:
· Uttar Pradesh (25.85% to 20.09%)
· Maharashtra (22.73% to 15.99%)
· Bihar (28.62% to 25.07%)
· West Bengal (17.77 % to 13.93%)
Census
(Year)
Density of Population
(Persons per sq. km)
1921
77
1931
90
1941
103
1951
117
1961
142
1971
177
1981
216
1991
267
2001
324
2011
382
Is a good measure for understanding the variation in the distribution of population. It is expressed as number of persons per square kilometer. According to Census 1991, average density of population in India is 267 persons per square kilometer. This average density makes India one of the most thickly populated countries of the world. The most striking feature of India’s density of population is that it has been consistently increasing since 1921.
· Density of population in India - 382
· Highest Density in state - Delhi (11297)
· Lowest Density in state – Arunachal Pardesh (17)
West Bengal is located in the Ganga delta, which is one of the most fertile areas of the world. The coastal plain of Kerala is also very fertile. Union Territories of Delhi and Chandigarh are mostly urban in character and are having very high densities of population.
India is an old country which a large young population; about 29 per cent of the population according to the 2011 census, is below the age of 14. 62.5% of population is aged between 15-59 years. Population above the age of 60 years is 8%.
The age structure of any population is determined by the levels of fertility, mortality and migration. Of these three factors, migration can affect the age structure of any population only when the migrants are concentrated in any one age group and the volume of migrations is large.
India has a large “young” population because the birth rates are high and the number of children born is large. The sustained high level of birth rates has resulted in a large proportion of children and a small proportion of old population. On the other hand, in economically developed countries, the birth rates are low and fewer children are born. The low birth rates result in a higher proportion of old people. Compared to the role of fertility, the role of mortality in determining the age structure of a population is limited, especially when mortality is low. Rapid reductions in mortality and lengthening of the life-span result in a “younger” population mainly because the improvement is first experienced by the infants and children. More infants and children survive, leading to an increase in the proportion of the young persons in the population. This is what has happened in India. One other implication of the young age structure of the Indian population is that it also has the potential of the high growth rates of the population in further years. Within a few years, these children will grow up, get married and start reproducing. When the number of couples in the reproductive age group (wife in the age group 15-44) is high, the birth rate can also be expected to be high, even with moderate fertility. This, in turn, leads to a high population growth rate.
Two measures are generally used for studying the age structure of any population: -
(1) The percentage of males in the population or the masculinity proportion, and
(2) The sex ratio
Of these two measures, the sex ratio is more frequently used in the study of the population. The sex ratio of a population may be expressed either as the number of males per 1000 females or the number of females per 100 males. The Indian Census has preferred to define the sex ratio as the number of the females per 1000 males, though the definition of the sex ratio followed the world over is the number of the males per 100 females.
Generally, in most countries, the overall sex ratio of the population is favourable to the females, that is, there are more females than males in the population. When the situation is different, that is, when there are more males than females in the population, this is considered unusual. The population statistics available through the Census indicate that the sex ratio in India has always been less than 1,000. In fact, the sex ratio has been declining from 972 in 1901 to 930 in 1971. A slight improvement was registered in the 1951 Census, and again during the 1981 Census, but the 1991 Census registered a fall by five points-from 934 in 1981 to 933 in 2001.In 2011 there is marginal recovery to 940.
The following three factors are responsible for determining the sex ratio of any population: (1) sex ratio at birth, (2) the sex ratio of the deceased persons and (3) the sex ratio of the net migrants. In a developing country like India, another factor could be added to this list. There is always a possibility that women are under-enumerated because they are not reported as members of the household by the head of the household, when the Census enumerator collects the information.
Of all these factors, high mortality of the females appears to be the most plausible explanation for the sex ratio in India, which is adverse to the females. The female in India is in a socially and culturally disadvantaged position, and has been accorded an inferior status over the centuries. The death rates for the females in most age groups are high than those for the males. Of the other factor, the sex ratio of newborn babies is not much different from that in other countries. Hence, a sex ratio that is adverse to the females, a peculiarity of the Indian demographic picture, need not be attributed to this factor. As for international migration of men, it is quite insignificant and is, therefore, not found to affect the sex ratio in India. Under-enumeration of the females cannot explain more than a very small part of the numerical imbalance between the males and the females in India.
· Child (0-6yrs.) sex-ratio - 914
· Highest sex-ratio in state – Kerala (1084)
· Lowest sex-ratio in UTs – Daman & Diu (618)
· Highest child(0-6) sex-ratio in state – Mizoram (971)
· Lowest child(0-6) sex-ratio in state – Haryana (830)
· Three major States (J&K, Bihar & Gujarat) have shown decline in sex ratio as compared to Census 2001.
· Kerala with 1084 has the highest sex ratio followed by Puducherry with 1038, Daman & Diu has the lowest sex ratio of 618. Mizoram has the highest child sex ratio (0-6 years) of 971 followed by Meghalaya with 970. Haryana is at the bottom with ratio of 830 followed by Punjab with 846.
Sex Ratio at Birth for the country has gone up by 2 point to 908 in 2010- 2012from 906 in 2009-2011.Chhattisgarh has reported the highest Sex Ratio at Birth (979) while Haryana, the lowest (857). After exhibiting stability from 2007-09 to 2009-11, the Sex ratio of child (age group 0-4)for the country has been decreased to 912 in 2010-2012.The highest and the lowest Child Sex Ratio have also been reported in Chhattisgarh (1011) and Haryana (837) respectively. (SRS-2012)
Religious Composition
Population
(%)
Hindus
827,578,868
80.5
Muslims
138,188,240
13.4
Christians
24,080,016
2.3
Sikhs
19,215,730
1.9
Buddhists
7,955,207
0.8
Jains
4,225,053
0.4
Other Religions and Persuasions
6,639,626
0.6
Religion not stated
727,588
0.1
Total
1,028,610,328
100.0
Additional information- Census 2011[2]
The total number of children in the age-group 0-6 is 158.8 million (-5 million since 2001)
Uttar Pradesh (29.7 million), Bihar (18.6 million), Maharashtra (12.8 million), Madhya Pradesh (10.5 million) and Rajasthan (10.5 million) constitute 52% children in the age group of 0-6 years.
Population (0-6 years) 2001-2011 registered minus (-)3.08 percent growth with minus (-)2.42 for males and -3.80 for females.
The proportion of Child Population in the age group of 0-6 years to total population is 13.1 percent while the corresponding figure in 2001 was 15.9 percent. The decline has been to the extent of 2.8 points.
Literacy rate has gone up from 64.83 per cent in 2001 to 74.04 per cent in 2011 showing an increase of 9.21 percentage points.
Percentage growth in literacy during 2001-2011 is 38.82; males: 31.98% & female: 49.10%.
The state of Kerala has the highest literacy rate 93.11%, whereas Bihar has the lowest 63.82%.
Literacy rate has gone up from 64.83 per cent in 2001 to 74.04 per cent in 2011showing an increase of 9.21 percentage points.
The population of Scheduled Castes at 16.6 per cent and Scheduled Tribes at 8.6 per cent, together forming a quarter of the total population.
In the period 2001-11, the SCs grew by 20.8 per cent and STs by 23.7 per cent.
The highest SC population, 31.9 per cent of the state's total number, is in Punjab. Lakshadweep has the highest proportion of STs at 94.8 per cent.
The work participation rate at 39.8 per cent. More than 60 per cent of the population does not participate in any economic activity. The figures may seem alarming but then students and homemakers have been categorized as 'non-workers', along with dependents, pensioners and beggars.
At 51.9 per cent, Himachal Pradesh has the highest work participation rate and Delhi, at 33.3 per cent, is among the states with lowest rates. Cultivators and agricultural labourers (54.6 per cent) form over half the working population.
The unemployment rate in India is estimated at 9.4 percent or 94 persons out of 1000 persons in the labour force for the fixed reference period of FY 2009-10, according to employment-unemployment survey by the Labour Bureau under the Labour and Employment Ministry. From 1983 until 2000, India’s Unemployment Rate averaged 7.20 percent reaching an historical high of 8.30 percent in December of 1983
At the level of the family, family planning implies having only the desired number of children. Thus family planning implies both limitation of the family to a number considered appropriate to the resources of the family as well as proper spacing between the children. The adoption of family planning obviously requires conscious efforts made by the couple to control conception.
When the government concerns itself with promoting the total welfare of the family and the community, through family planning, the programme consists of a wide range of activities, covering education, health, maternity and childcare, family planning and nutrition. Since 1977, the Indian family planning programme is known as the family welfare programme with greater emphasis on the welfare approach to the problem.
Milestones in the evolution of the population policy of India
1946 Bporthore Committee Report
1952 Launching of Family Planning Programme
1966 A department of family planning was created in the ministry of health
1976 Statement of National Population Policy
1977 Policy Statement on Family Welfare Programme Both statements were laid on the table of the House in Parliament, but never discussed or adopted.
1981 NPP modified
1983 The National Health Policy of 1983 emphasized the need for "securing the small family norm, through voluntary efforts and moving towards the goal of population stabilization". While adopting the Health Policy, Parliament emphasized the need for a separate National Population Policy.
1991 The National Development Council appointed a Committee on Population with Shri Karunakaran as Chairman. The Karunakaran Report (Report of the National Development Council (NDC) Committee on Population) endorsed by NDC in 1993 proposed the formulation of a National Population Policy to take a " a long term holistic view of development, population growth and environmental protection" and to "suggest policies and guidelines (for) formulation of programs" and "a monitoring mechanism with short, medium and long term perspectives and goals" (Planning Commission, 1992). It was argued that the earlier policy statements of 1976 and 1977 were placed on the table; however, Parliament never really discussed or adopted them. Specifically, it was recommended, "a National Policy of Population should be formulated by the Government and adopted by Parliament".
1993 An Expert Group headed by Dr. M.S. Swaminathan was asked to prepare a draft of a national population policy that would be discussed by the Cabinet and then by Parliament.
1994 Report on a National Population Policy by the Expert Group headed by Dr.Swaminathan. This report was circulated among Members of Parliament, and comments requested from central and state agencies. It was anticipated that a national population policy approved by the National Development Council and the Parliament would help produce a broad political consensus.
1997 On the 50th anniversary of India's Independence, Prime Minister Gujral promised to announce a National Population Policy in the near future. During 11/ 97 Cabinet approved the draft National Population Policy with the direction that this be placed before Parliament. However, this document could not be placed in either House of Parliament, as the respective Houses stood adjourned followed by dissolution of the Lok Sabha.
1999 Another round of consultations was held during 1998, and another draft National Population Policy was finalized and placed before the Cabinet in March 1999. Cabinet appointed a Group of Ministers (headed by Dy Chairman, Planning Commission) to examine the draft Policy. The GOM met several times and deliberated over the nuances of the Population Policy. In order to finalize a view about the inclusion/ exclusion of incentives and disincentives, the Group of Ministers invited a cross-section of experts from among academia, public health professionals, demographers, social scientists, and women's representatives. The GOM finalized a draft population policy, and placed the same before Cabinet. This was discussed in Cabinet on 19 November 1999. Several suggestions were made during the deliberations. On that basis, a fresh draft was submitted to Cabinet.
The NDA Government finally decided on 15th February 2000 to adopt the National Population Policy (2000) with a view to encourage two-child norm and aim at stabilizing the population by 2046 A.D The main features of the National Population Policy are as under.
Firstly, the Government has decided that the freeze on Lok Sabha seats imposed as per the 42nd Constitutional Amendment with 1971 census as the basis for deciding the number of seats which is valid upto 2001, is being extended till 2026. This is being done so that states like Tamil Nadu and Kerala, which have followed the small family norm effectively, should not be penalized and states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan should not be rewarded by granting more seats in Lok Sabha. The decision to freeze Lok Sabha seats upto 2026 is thus motivated to check the states ignoring population on policy to be rewarded and to avoid penalizing the states, which have been successful in implementing the small family norm.
Besides this, National Population Policy has listed the following measures to achieve a stable population by 2046.
· Reduction of infant mortality rate below 30 per 1000 live births
· Reduction of maternal mortality rate to below 1000 per 1,00,000 live births
· Universal immunization
· To achieve 80 per cent deliveries in regular dispensaries, hospitals and medical institutions with rained staff.
· Access to information, containing AIDS, prevention and control of communicable diseases.
· Incentive to adopt two-child small family norm
· Facilities for safe abortions to be increased
· Strict enforcement of Child Marriage Restraint Act and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act.
· Raising the age of girls not earlier than 18, and preferably raising it to 20 years or more.
· A special reward for women who marry after 21 and opt for a terminal method of contraception after the second child.
· Integration of Indian System of Medicine in the provision of reproduction and child health services.
· Health insurance covers for those below the poverty line who undergo sterilization after having two children.
· The appointment of a National Commission on Population to be headed y the Prime Minister to monitor the implementation of population policy.
· The Action Plan drawn for the next 10 crucial years includes the following:
A Self-help groups at village panchayat levels comprising mostly of housewives will interact with healthcare workers and gram Panchayats.
B Elementary education to the made free and compulsory
C Registration of marriage, pregnancy to be made compulsory along with births and deaths.
The Government hopes to achieve the objective of population stabilization by 2026 A.D. Immediately to improve the infrastructure; an additional allocation of Rs. 3,000 crores is required so that the unmet needs of contraception can be taken care of.
· Decentralized Planning and Programme Implementation
· Convergence of Service Delivery at Village Levels
· Empowering Women for Improved Health and Nutrition
· Child Health and Survival
· Meeting the Unmet Needs for Family Welfare Services
· Under-Served Population Groups including Urban Slums, Tribal Communities, Hill Area Populations and Displaced and Migrant Populations
· Adolescents
· Increased Participation of Men in Planned Parenthood
· Diverse Health Care Providers
· Collaboration With and Commitments from Non-Government Organisations and the Private Sector
· Mainstreaming Indian Systems of Medicine and Homeopathy
· Contraceptive Technology and Research on Reproductive and Child Health
· Providing for the Older Population
· Information, Education, and Communication
Population is a significant factor in social change. This fact can be clearly understood and its importance realized if we study the consequences of population growth on society. A steep rise in population in any country gives rise to various social problems. Many a change in the society is the mainly to population increase. For example, if there is such a rise in population that male population outnumbers the female population, the value of women will rise. If the female population outnumbers the male, sexual promiscuity is likely. In the past, as a result of wars, there used to be sharp decline in the number of young and healthy males, and this used to result in widespread prostitution and lesbianism. This was the case in postwar Germany. In social change, the increase in population has the following effects:
Increase in Poverty,Famine, Fall in the Living Standard, Decline in Health, Fragmentation of Agricultural Holdings, Dissolution of Family, Personal Disintegration, Marital Disintegration, Social Disintegration
All the above-mentioned social effects of population rise can be observed in modern India. This is the main reason why government is propagating family planning so lavishly. According to some scholars the population rise affects even the form of government.
Though there were cities in ancient civilization it is only in the last two centuries that urbanization has become a characteristic form of human life.
Indian people had built up a city civilization nearly 5,000 years back. Archaeological discoveries have shown that the Indian cities were in existence for a thousand years from 2500 B.C. to 1500 B.C. The Indus Valley Civilization extended over nearly a thousand miles from Ropar in Haryana in the north to Rangpur in Kathiawar in the south and up to Baluchistan in the west. The chief cities were Harappa and Mohenjodaro, which are now in Pakistan.
Each city had a well-fortified citadel, which was probably used for both religious and governmental purposes.
The layout of the cities, the regular planning of the streets, the uniformity in weights and measures, all indicate that there must have been a strong centralized State.
There were wide streets with large blocks of houses two or more storeys high.
Each house had a square courtyard with a number of rooms around like traditional Indian buildings up to the recent times.
The drainage and sewerage of these cities is one of the most unique features of the Indus Valley civilization.
Around 1700 B.C. there was eventual disappearance of Indus Valley civilization. The historians now believe that for about a thousand years after the Aryan invasion there were no cities in India.
But even at the time of Buddha 2,500 years ago, Kasi (Varanasi) and Kausambi were famous cities. In the time of the Mauryas, Pataliputra (Patna) was a big city. The great temple cities of Ayodhya, Mathura, Hardwar, Dwaraka, Kasi, Prayag, Puri, Kanchi and Madhurai are very ancient.
The emergence of new kingdoms necessitated the building of new capital cities, palaces, and consequently, there was the rise of elitist classes of nobles, militia and priests. There was spread of regions through territorial conquest and expansion.
The most important cities that were on the rise (mostly as capitals of different kingdoms) were Hastinapura, the capital of the Kaurav Kingdom of the Puru-Kuru branch of the tribe; Indraprastha, the capital of the Pandavas, Achichhatra, the capital of North Panchala Kingdom, Mathura and Kanyakubja or present Kanauj developed as the twin capitals of the kingdom of the Panchalas; Ayodhya, the capital of the Kosala, was set up on the bank of River sarju near present Fyzabad etc.
During Mauryan period many other types of towns came into existence apart from capital or administrative cities. These towns or cities were categoriser as: Rajadhaniya nagara, Sthaniya nagara, Kharveta, Kheta, Putabhedana, Nigama, Pattana and Dronamukha. Out of these the first four were administrative towns, Rajadhaniya being the capital city and the largest of all cities. The latter four types were mainly commercial cities The Putabhedana was a large commercial centre specializing in wholesale trade, the Nigama was an ordinary market centre, the Pattana was a coastal trading town and the Dronamukha served as a port city being located at the mouth of a river. Apart from towns like Khadavara, a military camp and Nivesa, an encampment, there were some specialized centres of learning and religion, arts and crafts and medicine.
The most important Tamil cities that developed in South India were Puhar, the Chola port and coastal capital; Uraiyar, the Chola inland capital; Korkai, the Pandhya coastal capital; Madurai, the Pandhya inland capital; Musiri, the Chera port; Kanchi (Kancheepuram of today), the inland capital of Tondaimandalam; and Vanji or Karur, the Chera inland capital. A distinctive feature of the southern kingdoms (Pandyas, Cholas and Cheras) was the existence of two capital cities for each kingdom.
The Muslim rulers, in general, had not taken to town building but there were some capital cities, which initially received real attention. Delhi and surrounding areas like Agra in 1506 were developed as new urban centers. The major urban centres, during this period, were Mathura, Thaneshwar, Allahabad, Varanasi, Patliputra, Gwalior, Ujjain, Dhar, Somnath, Meerut, Panipat, Broach, Baroda and Srinagar.
Urban development south of the Vindhyas was very different. The entire region situated south of the Vindhyan range witnessed great urban development with the beginning of 7th century A.D. mainly due to stable political situation of the South India Important cities like Ahmadnagar, Bijapur, Golconda, (now in ruins) and Hyderabad were the capitals of Muslim kings, while Hampi (now in ruins) and Pune belonged to Hindu kings. Other major cities were Gulbarga, Badami, Kolhpur, etc. The cities had mostly planned street layouts and large market centres-as seen in the Char Minar area of Hyderabad. Mostly the cities were walled and the centre of the city consisted of great monuments, like mosques or palaces.
The Portuguese were the first in the race, who established new port towns in India at Panaji in Goa in 1510 and Mumbai in 1532. They were followed by the Dutch who set up their first factory at Machilipatnam in 1605 and Nagapattinam in 1658 and subsequently, came the British who established themselves in Chennai in 1639 and Kolkatta in 1690. The last of the European power was the French who set up factory at Surat in 1668, at Pondicherry in 1673 and Chandernagore in 1690.
The centres of commercial activity that they established became important urban centres in small span of time, e.g., Goa, Pondicherry, Chandernagore, Mahe, Yanam, Karikal, etc. The three centres of Kolkatta, Mumbai and Chennai were entirely new cities established by the British.
In 1881 the level of urbanisation was 9.1 per cent, which rose only to 10.84 per cent by 1901. By this time India had 25 cities with one lakh or more population and 69 cities with a population of 50,000 or over. The major contributions of the British, during the 20th century, to the urban scene were.
It has been already discussed that the British influence made Kolkatta, Chennai and Mumbai as the most important cities with the concentration of administrative, commercial and industrial activities. Mostly the city's focal point was the central commercial area, with tall, European-style buildings, occupied by the banks and headquarters of commercial and industrial houses. Rail and road transportation formed junction at the city's focal point.
Apart from the administrative headquarters that emerged as the most prominent towns and cities, there were some smaller administrative centres known as 'Civil Lines' and the Cantonments that were mostly built near major towns for providing security.
Britishers established a number of hill stations at selected spots on the hills and mountains of North, Central and South India. The British belonged to the region of cool temperate climate and for them extreme hot condition during summer season was intolerable, inhospitable and they considered it a threat to good health and longevity. For instance, Shimla-Mussoorie-Nainital near Delhi, Nilgiri-Kodaikanal near Chennai and Mahabaleshwar in the Western Ghats near Mumbai. The plan and architecture of these cities followed English style and mostly the common Indians remained alienated from these resorts.
Urban development in the Post-Independence Period
After independence urban development in India entered a new and more important phase under the planned economy of the Indian Government. The rate of urban growth in the post-independence period was very rapid. The number of one-lakh and million cities increased and along with them increased the urban population.
The proportion of urban population to total population increased from 17.3 per cent in 1951 to 25.7 percent in 1991. A dramatic change occurred in the urban scene as it went through different quinquenium of planned growth.
To rehabilitate the refugees during partition, 14 new towns were built-one was in West Bengal, five in Uttar Pradesh, four in the Punjab, three in Gujarat and one in Maharashtra. Additionally, some refugee colonies (new townships), designated as model towns, were set up near existing cities The model towns added new dimension to the level of urbanisation in India.
The partition of India in 1947 and the reorganization of states on linguistic lines led to the creation of many states. The new states were without capital cities. These states with Central assistance built new capital cities. Chandigarh, Bhubaneshwar, Gandhinagar and Dispur are examples of such towns. Most of these settlements are planned. Chandigarh, for example, has been laid on a grid plan.
The steel cities of Rourkela, Durgapur, Bhilai Nagar and Bokaro are best examples of this situation. Other new industrial cities were the refinery towns of Barauni, Noonmati, Haldia and Ankaleshwar; the fertilizer towns at Sindri, Mittrapur, Naya Nangal and Namrup; port towns such as Kandla and Paradeep; and aluminium towns like Korba and Ratnagiri.
In the post-independence period the areas served by the metropolises and their activities have increased considerably.
The term ‘urban’ means characteristic of or situated in a city or town. It is customary to define ‘urban area’ in terms of physical characteristics, namely size and the density of people and the concentration of employment in Secondary and Tertiary Activity.
In the Census of India 2011, the definition of urban area adopted is as follows: (a) All statutory places with a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town area committee, etc. (b) A place satisfying the following three criteria simultaneously:
i) a minimum population of 5,000;
ii) at least 75 per cent of male working population [3]engaged in non-agricultural pursuits; and
iii) a density of population of at least 400 per sq. km. (1,000 per sq. mile).
Besides, the Directors of Census, Operations in State/Union Territories were allowed to include in consultation with the concerned State Government/Union Territory Administration and the census commissioner of India, some places having distinct urban characteristics as urban even if such places did not strictly satisfy all the criteria mentioned under category. Such marginal cases include major project colonies, areas of intensive industrial development, railway colonies, important tourist centres, etc.
Apart from these, the outgrowths (OGs) of cities and towns have also been treated as urban, as explained later under 'Urban Agglomerations'.
Year
1901
1911
Urban population (% of total Population)
10.8
10.3
11.2
12.0
13.9
17.3
18.0
19.9
23.3
25.7
27.8
31.16
An Urban Agglomeration[4] is a continuous urban spread constituting a town and its adjoining urban outgrowths (OGs) or two or more physically contiguous towns together and any adjoining urban outgrowths of such towns. Examples of OGs are railway colonies, university campuses, port areas, etc., that may come up near a city or statutory town outside its statutory limits but within the revenue limits of a village or villages contiguous to the town or city. Each such individual area by itself may not satisfy the minimum population limit to qualify it to be treated as an independent urban unit but may deserve to be clubbed with the town as a continuous urban spread.
For the purpose of delineation of Urban Agglomerations during Census of India 2001, following criteria are taken as pre-requisites: (a) The core town or at least one of the constituent towns of an urban agglomeration should necessarily be a statutory town; and (b) The total population of all the constituents (i.e. towns and outgrowths) of an Urban Agglomeration should not be less than 20,000 (as per the 1991 Census). With these two basic criteria having been met, the following are the possible different situations in which Urban Agglomerations would be constituted: (i) a city or town with one or more contiguous outgrowths; (ii) two or more adjoining towns with their outgrowths; and (iii) a city and one or more adjoining towns with their outgrowths all of which form a continuous spread.
Thus, all places, which are found to satisfy the prescribed conditions are considered as urban, and the remaining are treated as rural. The smallest area of a rural habitation is generally called 'village'. But cases where habitational areas within the village are continued to one or more pockets are also quite common. In such cases each residential pocket called 'hamlet' becomes the smallest rural habitation. The unsurveyed and forest habitational areas are likely to have locally recognised boundaries and each such area is treated as one rural unit.
The Directors of Census Operations in consultation with this office prepared the list of urban areas, which is generally referred to as the "Town list". Simultaneously constituted the basic frame for the organisation of census operations. In the 1991 Census 4,689 places were identified as towns as against 4,029 in the 1981 Census. Out of 4,689 towns of 1991, as many as 2,996 are statutory towns and 1,693 are census or non-municipal towns as against 2,758 and 1,272, respectively, in 1981.
At the Census 2011 as many as 6166 towns were delineated, which were 1005 more than the number at the 2001 Census (5161).
Class
Population Size
No.of UAs/Towns
Class I (City)
1,00,000 and above
393
Class II
50,000 - 99,999
401
Class III
20,000 - 49,999
1,151
Class IV
10,000 - 19,999
1,344
Class V
5,000 - 9,999
888
Class VI
Less than 5,000
191
Unclassified
10*
All classes
4378
At the 2011 Census, there were 53 UAs/Cities with Million Plus population.. About 40% of the total urban population as per the Census 2011 lives in these Million Plus UAs/Cities in India.
Out of the 53 Million Plus UAs/Cities, 7 are located in Uttar Pradesh, 5 each in Gujarat and Maharashtra, 3 each in Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, 2 each in Punjab and West Bengal, Jharkhand and 1 each in Delhi, Haryana, Bihar, Kerala, Karnataka and Rajasthan.
India no longer lives in villages. During the last fifty years the population of India has grown two and half times, but Urban India has grown by nearly five times. In numerical terms, India’s urban population is second largest in the world after China, and is higher than the total urban population of all countries put together barring China, USA and Russia.
An area of sub-standard, over-crowed housing occupied by the poor, the unemployed, the unemployable and immigrants, who cannot afford to live elsewhere. Slums are judged by subjective criteria: a sub-culture with a set of norms and values reflected in poor situation, , tailing over-priced goods. Socially slums tend to be isolated from the remainder of urban society and exhibit pathological social symptoms (drug abuse, alcoholism, crime, vandalism and other deviant behaviour).
The dominant facet of third world urban growth, comprising a concentration of mashift dwellings, usually at the edge of the city, on public or private land which is neither owned nor rented by the builders/occupants. Such settlements or shantytowns have emerged because the formal housing market has been unable to cope with the rate of increase of cope with the rate of increase of population and especially immigration to urban areas. The quality of shanty dwellings is rudimentary, initial building using any materials available-wood, cardboard, zinc sheets, etc. There is a severe absence of public services-roads are unpaved, sanitation systems are crude, water supplies, educational and medical services inadequate. The occupants of squatter settlements are usually the urban poor, since they act as reception areas for migrants, whom they assist in adapting to urban life. Squatter settlements are known by various local names, e.g., barracks (Guatemala, Venezuela), barriadas (Peru), barrios (Venezuela), barrios pirats (Columbia), bidonvilles (Algeria, Moroccol), bustees (India), colonies proletarians (Mexico), courts (Haiti), favelas (Brazil), gecekoudu (Trukey), gourbivilles (Tunisia), kampongs (south east Asia), ranchos (Venezuela), solares (Chile), villas miserias (Argentina).
An attempt has been made for the first time during the Census of India, 2001 to collect detailed data about slum areas of the country particularly in cities/towns having 50,000 population or more based on 1991 census. All the inhabitants of the areas, which have been notified as slums by the state governments under any legal provisions or even recognized by them, have been accordingly considered as slum population for this purpose.
Besides areas in cities/towns, which satisfy the usual criteria for declaring an area as slum have also been included. For the purpose of Census of India, 2001, the slum areas broadly constitute of: -
All specified areas notified as ‘Slum’ by State/Local Government and UT Administration under any Act;
All areas recognized as ‘Slum’ by State/Local Government and UT Administration, which may have not been formally notified as slum under any Act;
A compact area of at least 300 population or about 60-70 households of poorly built congested tenements, in unhygienic environment usually with inadequate infrastructure and lacking in proper sanitary and drinking water facilities.
The Directorate of Census Operations in consultation with the State Government/Local Authorities were asked to identify slum areas in municipal towns having population of 50,000 or more as per 1991 census. Therefore, the estimates of slum population given below primarily are confined to cities and towns having more than 50,000 populations at the 1991 Census.
Though the criteria adopted for formation of slum was confined to municipal towns having 50,000 population, however, in a few stray cases even the non municipal towns were found to have large number of slum areas, necessitating formation of slum by the local authorities. For instance in National Capital Region of Delhi, eleven Census towns and in Uttar Pradesh one Census town has reported slum population. In addition to these, six towns, one in Bihar, two in Madhya Pradesh, two in Gujarat and one in Maharashtra, could qualify the population criteria of 50,000 after adding population of outgrowths as returned for Census of India, 1991. In case of Shillong, slum areas were notified in the entire urban agglomeration as such slum population has been reported from the Shillong urban agglomeration. Slum population has been reported from 26 States/Union territories. Nine States/Union territories, namely, Himachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Daman & Diu and Lakshadweep have not reported any slum population in their Class I & II cities/towns.
Census of India 2001 have released data on the number and population of cities/towns reporting slum, total slum population and slum population in 0-6 age group and literate slum population by sex - India & State/Union territory. Similarly data on population, slum population, and slum population in 0-6 age group and literate slum population by sex in million plus cities.
As per criteria adopted by Census of India 2001, only those cities/towns, which returned at least 50,000 populations in 1991 Census, were considered for identifying Slum Population. Other criteria included as already mentioned above. Only 607 such towns have reported slums.
Total Slum Population returned as per provisional results of Census of India 2001 was 40,605,418, comprising of 22.76% of the total urban population of the cities/towns reporting slums.
Largest Slum population was registered in Maharashtra (10.64 million).
The largest proportion of slum population in Million plus cities was registered in Greater Mumbai (48.88%) and the lowest in Patna (0.25%).
About 1% of India’s population lives in the slums of Maharashtra.
Around 6% of Maharashtra population lives in slums of Greater Mumbai.
Proportion of Slum Population to total population in Cities/Towns varied form41.33% to 1.81%, the largest being Meghalaya (41.33%) and the lowest Kerala (1.81%).
Sex ratio, (i.e., number of females per thousand males) of the Slum Population varied from 1032 (Pondicherry) to 707 (Chandigarh). Kerala also returned high sex ratio (1029).
Proportion of Children (0-6) among slum population in Million Plus Cities was found to be highest in Jaipur (18.11%) and lowest in Kolkata (9.35%).
Literacy Rate among Slum population was found to be quite high, varying form 88.08% (Meghalaya) to 55.46% (Chandigarh). The Male Literacy Rate varied from 91.05% (Meghalaya) to 65.59% (Chandigarh). Female Literacy Rate was also found to be high varying from 85.11% (Meghalaya) and Chandigarh (40.09%).
As per the report of Pranab Sen Committee to look in to various aspects of census, country’s slum population had by 17.8 million people in the last.The committee projected the slum in 2011 at 93.06 million, up from.26 million in 2001 as per the new definition. The 2001 census figures pegged the population at 52.40 million.
The Ninth Plan Working Group on Housing has estimated the investment requirement for housing in urban areas at Rs.526, 00 crores. The India Infrastructure Report, 1996 estimates the annual investment need for urban water supply, sanitation and roads at about 28,035 crores for the next ten years. The Central Public Health Engineering (CPHEEO) has estimated the requirement of funds for 100 percent coverage of the urban population under safe water supply and sanitation services by the year 2021 at Rs.172, 905 crores. Estimates by Rail India Technical and Economic Services (RITES) indicate that the amount required for urban transport infrastructure investment in cities with population 100,000 or more during the next 20 years would be of the order of Rs.207, 000 crore. Obviously, sums of these magnitudes cannot be located from within the budgetary resources of Central, State and Local Governments. A compulsion has, therefore, arisen to access financial resources from the market and induces the private sector to participate in urban development programmes.
Private sector investment for provisions of urban infrastructure cannot take place unless a proper legal and regulatory framework for such investment is created and developed which ensures a full cost plus recovery of such investment. This calls for innovative reforms in municipal tax structure and user charges, taking into account poor paying capacity of a sizeable section of urban population. Various modes of Private-Public-Partnership (PPP) are being experimented by different urban local bodies in the country. Municipal Bond, Tradable Development Rights, Urban Shelter and Infrastructure Fund, use of Land as a Resource are some of the new techniques that are being applied by the city authorities. The Constitution (74th) Amendment Act 1992 has unleashed a new era of dynamism and reform in Urban India. The future is full of possibilities and excitement for investors, planners, administrators, economists and above all 300 million urban dwellers of India.
The policies of urban development and housing in India have come a long way since 1950s. The pressure of urban population and lack of housing and basic services were very much evident in the early 1950s. In some cities this was compounded by migration of people from Pakistan. However, the general perception of the policy makers was that India is pre-dominantly an agricultural and rural economy and that there are potent dangers of over urbanisation, which will lead to the drain of resources from the countryside to feed the cities. The positive aspects of cities as engines of economic growth in the context of national economic policies were not much appreciated and, therefore, the problems of urban areas were treated more as welfare problems and sectors of residual investment rather than as issues of national economic importance.
First Five Year Plan (1951-56),
Emphasis was given on institution building and on construction of houses for Government employees and weaker sections.
National Building Organisation and Town & Country Planning Organisation were set up.
Rehabilitation of the refugees from Pakistan and on building the new city of Chandigarh.
An Industrial Housing Scheme was also initiated. The Centre subsidized Scheme to the extent of 50% towards the cost of land and construction.
Second Plan (1956-61).
The Industrial Housing Scheme was widened to cover all workers.
Three new schemes were introduced, namely, Rural Housing, Slum Clearance and Sweepers Housing.
Town & Country Planning Legislations were enacted in many States and necessary organisations were also set up for preparation of Master Plans for important towns.
Third Plan (1961-66)
A Scheme was introduced in 1959 to give loans to State Govts for housing programmes.
For a period of 10 years for acquisition and development of land in order to make available building sites in sufficient numbers.
Master Plans for major cities were prepared and the State capitals of Gandhi Nagar and Bhubaneswar were developed.
Fourth Plan (1969-74)
The balanced urban growth was accorded high priority
The need to prevent further growth of population in large cities and need for decongestion or dispersal of population.
Creation of smaller towns and by planning the spatial location of economic activity.
Housing & Urban Development Corporation (HUDCO) was established
A Scheme for Environmental Improvement or Urban Slums was undertaken in the Central Sector from 1972-73
Fifth Plan (1974-79)
Efforts to augment civic services in urban areas with particular emphasis on a comprehensive and regional approach to problems in metropolitan cities.
A Task Force was set up for development of small and medium towns.
The Urban Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act was enacted to prevent concentration of land holding in urban areas and to make available urban land for construction of houses for the middle and low-income groups.
Sixth Plan (1980-85)
Integrated provision of services along with shelter, particularly for the poor.
The Integrated Development of Small and Medium Towns (IDSMT) was launched in towns with population below one lakh
Seventh Plan (1985-90)
Stress on the need to entrust major responsibility of housing construction on the private sector.
The National Housing Bank was set up to expand the base of housing finance.
NBO was reconstituted
A network of Building Centres was also set up during this Plan period.
The Seventh Plan explicitly recognised the problems of the urban poor and for the first time an Urban Poverty Alleviation Scheme known as Urban Basic Services for the Poor (UBSP) was launched.
As a follow-up of the Global Shelter Strategy (GSS), National Housing Policy (NHP) was announced in 1988.
The National Commission of Urbanisation submitted its report.
Eighth Plan (1992-97)
For the first time this plan explicitly recognised the role and importance of urban sector for the national economy.
The Plan identified the key issues in the emerging urban scenario: The scarce infrastructural services badly hit the poor, Huge backlog of housing shortages, resulting in proliferation of slums and squatter settlement and decay of city environment, High incidence of marginal employment and urban poverty as reflected in NSS 43rd round that 41.8 million urban people lived below the poverty line.
The response of the Plan to this scenario was the launching of Urban Poverty and Alleviation Programme of Nehru Rozgar Yojana (NRY)
Ninth Plan (1997-2002)
With a view to provide gainful employment to the urban unemployed or underemployed through encouraging the setting up of self-employment ventures or provision of wage employment, a new urban poverty alleviation programme, namely, Swarna Jayanti Shahari Rojgar Yojana (SJSRY) was launched on 01.12.1997 after subsuming the earlier three Urban Poverty Alleviation Schemes, namely Urban Basic Services for the Poor (UBSP), Nehru Rojgar Yojana (NRY) and Prime Ministers Integrated Urban Poverty Eradication Programme (PMI UPEP).
a new Centrally sponsored scheme called Valmiki Ambedkar Awas Yojana (VAMBAY) with a view to ameliorating the conditions of the urban slum dwellers living below the poverty line who do not possess adequate shelter, launched Jan 2001,
Tenth Plan (2002-2007)
Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) launched dec 2005
Integrated Housing and Slum Development Programme(IHSDP)
National Urban Housing and Habitat Policy, 2007
Eleventh Plan (2007-2012)
The magnitude of housing shortage was estimated by a Technical Group in the context of formulation of the 11th Five Year Plan. The Technical Group estimated the housing shortage at the end of the 10th Plan to be around 24.7 million for 67.4 million households.
The long-term goal of the NHP was to eradicate houseless ness, improve the housing conditions of the inadequately housed and provide a minimum level of basic services and amenities to all. The role of Government was conceived, as a provider for the poorest and vulnerable sections and as a facilitator for other income groups and private sector by the removal of constraints and the increased supply of land and services.
The Constitution of India has assigned the subjects pertaining to the urban areas to the State Legislates. In so far as the urban issues are concerned, the legislative powers of the Union are limited only to the following subject/areas:
· Delhi and other UnionTerritories
· Property of the Union
· A subject of the state list which two or more state legislatures authorize Union Parliament to legislate.
· Amendment of the Constitution of India.
In exercise of these legislative powers, the Parliament of India has enacted the following legislations, which are administrated by the Ministry of Urban Development.
This is a revolutionary piece of legislation by which Constitution of India was amended to incorporate a separate Chapter on urban local bodies, which seeks to redefine their role, power, function and finances. The salient features of this Act are:
Urban local bodies, to be known as Municipal Corporations, Municipal Councils and Nagar Panchayat depending on the population, shall be constituted through universal adult franchise in each notified urban are of the country. These shall be constituted for a period of five years and if dissolved earlier, an election to reconstitute it shall be completed before the expiration of a period of six months from the date of its dissolution.
Not less than one-third of total number of seats in each urban local body shall be reserved for women.
The Legislature of a State may by law entrust on these bodies such power and authority as may be necessary to enable them to function as institution of local self-government, including those listed in the Twelfth Schedule.
In each district a District Planning Committee shall be constituted to consolidate the plan prepared by the urban and rural local bodies.
Similarly for each metropolitan area a Metropolitan Planning Committee shall be constituted to prepare a development plan for the metropolitan area a whole.
This law was enacted by the Parliament on the basis of the authority given to it by a few State Legislatures. The Act came into force in 1976 in the States of Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Punjab, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal and in all the Union Territories. The Act was subsequently adopted by the States of Assam, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Meghalaya and Rajasthan. It was enacted with a view to prevent concentration of urban land in the hands of a few persons, speculation and profiteering in urban land and to bring about an equitable distribution of urban land to subserve the common good. However, out of 2,20,674 hectares of land declared surplus under the Act, only 19,020 hectares could be taken for construction of dwelling units. The remaining area was locked up in litigation leading to scarcity of land and rise in land prices.
The Urban Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act 1976 has been repealed by the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Repeal Act, 1999. The Repeal Act has been notified in March 1999. It shall come force in the Union Territories and the States of Punjab and Haryana where the State Legislatures have already approved the repeal.
The Centrally sponsored scheme of Integrated Development of Small & Medium Towns (IDSMT) was initiated in the year 1979-80 and is continuing with periodic amendments and modifications.
Improving infrastructural facilities and helping in the creation of durable public assets in small and medium towns.
Decentralizing economic and employment opportunities and promoting dispersed urbanisation
Increasing the availability of serviced sites for housing, commercial and industrial uses.
Integrating spatial and socio-economic planning as envisaged in the Constitution (74th Amendment) Act, 1992.
Promoting resource-generating schemes for the urban local bodies to improve their overall financial position.
IDSMT Scheme will be applicable to towns with population upto 5 lakhs subject to the stipulation that 1/3 of the total amount available each year for the Scheme as a whole will be allocated to towns with less than 50,000 population. The identification of towns shall be left to the State Govt., UTs according to their Urban Development Strategy, within the framework of guidelines. While selecting the towns preference will be given to headquarters of districts followed by Mandi towns and industrial growth centres, tourist places, pilgrim centres etc.
The centrally sponsored scheme for infrastructural development in mega cities was initiated during 1993-94. The primary objective of the scheme is to enable the mega cities to build a revolving fund by the end of the Ninth Plan for sustained investment in urban infrastructure through adoption of direct and indirect cost recovery measures.
The main features of the scheme are as follows:
The scheme is applicable to Mumbai, Kolkatta, Chennai, Bangalore and Hyderabad.
The funds under the scheme are channelised through a specialized institution/nodal agency at the state level.
The sharing between Central Govt. and State Govt. is at 25%: 25%; the balance 50% is to be met from institutional finance/capital market.
The projects under the scheme consist of a suitable mix/basket of (A) remunerative, (B) user charge-based and (C) basic services projects.
The nodal agencies are required to provide project-related finance for urban infrastructure including water supply, sewerage, drainage, sanitation, city transport networks, land development, slum improvement, solid waste management, etc.
The Swarna Jayanti Shahari Rozgar Yojana (SJSRY) has been launched on 1st December 1997 as a replacement for the earlier urban poverty alleviation schemes of Government of India, namely, Nehru Rozgar Yojana (NRY), Urban Basic Services for the Poor (UBSP), and Prime Minister’s Integrated Urban Poverty Eradication Programme (PMI UPEP). It seeks to provide gainful employment to the urban unemployed or underemployed poor through encouraging the setting up of self-employment ventures or provision of wage employment.
The SJSRY is funded on 75:25 bases between the Centre and the States.
The Scheme consists of two programmes, namely: -
· The Urban Self Employment Programme (USEP)
· The Urban Wage Employment Programme (UWEP)
This programme has three distinct parts: -
Assistance to individual urban poor beneficiaries for setting up gainful self-employment ventures.
Assistance to groups of urban poor women for setting up gainful self-employment ventures. This sub-scheme may be called “The Scheme for Development of Women and Children in the Urban Areas (DWCUA)”.
Training of beneficiaries, potential beneficiaries and other persons associated with the urban employment programme for upgradation and acquisition of vocational and entrepreneurial skills.
This programme shall seek to provide wage employment to beneficiaries living below the poverty line within the jurisdiction of urban local bodies by utilizing their labour for construction of socially and economically useful public assets.
This programme shall apply to urban local bodies, the population of which was less than 5 lakhs as per the 1991 Census.
The Central Government had introduced a Centrally Sponsored Scheme in the Fifth Five Year Plan for Environmental Development of Urban Slums (EIUS). The scheme was transferred in the State Sector. Experience shows that virtually none of the State Governments has been able to provide sufficient funds for the scheme as a result of which there has not been much improvement and upgradation work in urban slums except, in some selected areas where special projects were sanctioned. Therefore, it was considered appropriate for the Government of India to introduce the National Slum Development Programme in 1996.
Provision of physical amenities like water supply, storm water drains, community bath, widening and paving of existing lanes, sewers, community latrines, street lights, etc.
Provision of Community centres to be used for pre-school education, non-formal education, adult education, recreational activities etc.
Social Amenities like pre-school education, non-formal education, adult education, maternity, child health care including immunization etc. The scheme will attempt to bring about convergence between schemes being implemented by different line departments and may also provide missing links, if required.
Provision for Shelter: The Scheme must have a component of shelter upgradation or construction of new houses (including EWS) as may be required. Not less than 10% of the allocation to State under this assistance shall be utilised for construction and/or upgradation of houses for the urban poor. State may work out State specific schemes for housing construction/upgradation under this component subject to the proviso that the scheme shall not be an entirely subsidy based scheme but the funding shall contain a loan component as well.
The scheme must make adequate provision for achieving convergence between different sectoral and departmental programmes related to achieving social sector goals similar to those envisaged in this scheme.
According to the 2001 census, India has a population of 1027 million with approximately 28 per cent or 285 million people living in urban areas. It is estimated that by the year 2011, urban areas would contribute about 65 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). However, this higher productivity is contingent upon the availability and quality of infrastructure services. Urban economic activities are dependent on infrastructure, such as power, telecom, roads, water supply and mass transportation, coupled with civic infrastructure, such as sanitation and solid waste management. It is estimated that over a seven-year period, the Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) would require a total investments of Rs. 1,20,536 crores. It was well recognized that in order to fructify these investments, a national level initiative is required that would bring together the State Governments and enable ULBs catalyze investment flows in the urban infrastructure sector. There is a felt need to set up an initiative that will provide reform linked assistance to State Governments and ULBs in the country.
The scheme was officially inaugurated by the Prime minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh on 3 December 2005. The duration of the Mission would be seven years beginning from the year 2005-06.
The Mission statement reads as follows:
“The aim is to encourage reforms and fast track planned development of identified
Cities. Focus is to be on efficiency in urban infrastructure and service delivery mechanisms, community participation, and accountability of ULBs/ Parastatal agencies towards citizens.”
The objectives of the JNNURM are to ensure that the following are achieved in the urban sector
Focused attention to integrated development of infrastructure services in cities covered under the Mission
Establishment of linkages between asset-creation and asset-management through a slew of reforms for long-term project sustainability
Ensuring adequate funds to meet the deficiencies in urban infrastructural services.
Planned development of identified cities including peri-urban areas, outgrowths and urban corridors leading to dispersed urbanization
Scale-up delivery of civic amenities and provision of utilities with emphasis on universal access to the urban poor
Special focus on urban renewal programme for the old city areas to reduce congestion
Provision of basic services to the urban poor including security of tenure at affordable prices, improved housing, water supply and sanitation, and ensuring delivery of other existing universal services of the government for education, health and social security.
The Mission shall comprise two Sub- Missions, namely:
(1) Sub-Mission for Urban Infrastructure and Governance: This will be administered by the Ministry of Urban Development through the Sub- Mission Directorate for Urban Infrastructure and Governance. The main thrust of the Sub-Mission will be on infrastructure projects relating to water supply and sanitation, sewerage, solid waste management, road network, urban transport and redevelopment of old city areas with a view to upgrading infrastructure therein, shifting industrial and commercial establishments to conforming areas, etc.
(2) Sub-Mission for Basic Services to the Urban Poor: This will be administered by the Ministry of Urban Employment and Poverty Alleviation through the Sub-Mission Directorate for Basic Services to the Urban Poor. The main thrust of the Sub-Mission will be on integrated development of slums through projects for providing shelter, basic services and other related civic amenities with a view to providing utilities to the urban poor.
Category A
MegaCities/ UAs
Category B
Million plus Cities/ UAas
Category C*
Cities/ UAs with less than one
million population
(1) Delhi
(2) Greater Mumbai
(3) Ahmedabad
(4) Bangalore
(5) Chennai
(6) Kolkata
(7) Hyderabad
(1) Patna
(2) Faridabad
(3) Bhopal
(4) Ludhiana
(5) Jaipur
(6) Lucknow
(7) Madurai
(8) Nashik
(9) Pune
(10) Cochin
(11) Varanasi
(12) Agra
(13) Amritsar
(14) Vishakhapatnam
(15) Vadodara
(16) Surat
(17) Kanpur
(18) Nagpur
(19) Coimbatore
(20) Meerut
(21) Jabalpur
(22) Jamshedpur
(23) Asansol
(24) Allahabad
(25) Vijayawada
(26) Rajkot
(27) Dhanbad
(28) Indore
(1) Guwahati
(2) Itanagar
(3) Jammu
(4) Raipur
(5) Panaji
(6) Shimla
(7) Ranchi
(8) Thiruvananthapuram
(9) Imphal
(10) Shillong
(11) Aizawl
(12) Kohima
(13) Bhubaneshwar
(14) Gangtok
(15) Agartala
(16) Dehradun
(17) Bodhgaya
(18) Ujjain
(19) Puri
(20) Ajmer-Pushkar
(21) Nainital
(22) Mysore
(23) Pondicherry
(24) Chandigarh
(25) Srinagar
(26) Mathura
(27) Haridwar
(28) Nanded
Ministry of Works, Housing and Supply
1952
Renamed Ministry of Urban Affairs and Employment
1955
Renamed , the Ministry of Urban Development
April, 1999
This Ministry was bifurcated into two Ministries viz.
(i) "Ministry of Urban Development" and
(ii) "Ministry of Urban Employment and Poverty Alleviation[6]" with effect from
Oct , 1999.(merged in 2000 again bifurcated in 2004)
For strengthening urban governance, the following steps need to be taken:
Transfer of all the 18 functions identified in the 74th Constitutional Amendment to the ULBs (urban local bodies).
Set up an independent utility regulator at the state level to monitor service levels and adjudicate disputes related to state and pricing of services.
With the objective of establishing single point accountability, the Mayor should be the Executive Head of the city and he should be vested with appropriate authority.
All million plus metropolitan areas should set up a Unified Metropolitan Transport Authority (UMTA).
Every municipality should publish a Citizens’ Charter which should contain comprehensive information on services levels for all urban services.
In all metropolitan areas and cities, dedicated government agencies with additional autonomy should be carved out to provide services like water supply, solid waste management, sewerage, sanitation etc. The allocated municipal bodies may procure services from these agencies by entering into suitable MoUs.
Committees and Area Sabhas should be set up for institutionalizing participatory development process for effectively carrying out the functions devolved to Urban Local Bodies.
Adopt an outcome based project and put up a robust monitoring systemix. Set up Lokayuktas / Ombudsman at state and city level
India’s urbanization effort is being implemented through disjointed projects / activities with inadequate or no planning for the urban area as a whole.
The Master Plan approach focuses on only the core area of the city and has little linkages to any financial and operational strategy.
Every city/town should have a Development Plan by taking at least a 10 year perspective
Along with the City Development Plan, there is need for a functional plan that indicates the sources of funds required for holistic urban development of the city.
There is a need to provide incentives for strategic densification of cities / new towns on growth corridors.
Considering land re-adjustment which is gaining acceptance as an alternative to land acquisition.
The total capital investments required in urban infrastructure over the next 20 years has been estimated to be about Rs. 39 lakh crore.
The share of Urban Local Bodies own revenues has declined significantly from 63% in 2002- 03 to about 53% in 2007-08.
A major strategy under the 12th Plan would be to strengthen the municipal finance and make them predictable.
Profits accruing to Urban Local Bodies from innovative sources like land monetization should be pooled into a “ring fenced” City Development Fund which should be used only for urban infrastructure projects.
The State Finance Commissions need to be further strengthened for functional devolution and imparting predictability to the municipal finances.
Some measures on how to improve municipal functions would include:
Making a Constitutional Amendment that clearly outlines the various tax and non-tax revenue streams for Urban Local Bodies through the incorporation of a Local Bodies Finance List in the Constitution.
States should share 25% of the GST equivalent with Urban and Local Bodies.
Additional Floor Space Index (FSI) i.e. giving beyond what is normally prescribed should be charged for adequately.
Increase user charges collection for all measurable services where beneficiaries are easily identifiable. The user charges should not only cover O&M cost, debt servicing cost and depreciation, but also provides minimal profit to the Urban Local Bodies.
Added investments from the private sector can be obtained through People – Private – Public Partnerships (PPPP) and about 13-23% of investments in urban infrastructure can be raised through this mode.
Lack of efficient capacity across all levels of Government is the root cause of India’s urban development challenges
Substantial skill gaps exist across all areas of urban management.
The Central Government should create a comprehensive frame-work that addresses issues such as staffing, training, skill development and finances.
Every State should institutionalize a dedicated municipal cadre with necessary technical skills.
To meet the skill deficit in the short to medium term, policies should enable reforms from the private sector and hiring of external Consultants through a fast track process.
A dedicated unit to address issues such as implementation of reforms, dissemination of best practices across urban issues should be set up under the capacity building mission structure of JNNURM.
The Government of India in partnership with the State Governments and the private sector should set up 5 Indian Institutes of Urban Management (IIUMs).
The Ministry of Urban Development and the Ministry of Housing & Urban Poverty Alleviation should bolster existing institutions and set up new ones to assist with policy research, design etc.
The Government’s net-work of about 1,800 Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs) and 3,300 Industrial Training Centers (ITCs) run by the private sector can be roped in for skilling personnel from Urban Local bodies.
The Indian Institute of Public Administration along with the Administrative Training Institutes should be tasked with the preparation of standardized training modules.
The focus of the National Institute of Urban Affairs should be renewed so that it is capable of assisting the Ministry of Urban Development with policy formulation, providing advisory services to States etc.
The Technical Group on the Estimation of Urban Housing shortage has estimated the current shortage to be about 18.8 million dwelling units. The Group has further estimated that 73% of the shortage in self occupied units is in bottom 40% of the urban households.
Under the scheme of JNNURM, only about 1.6 million dwelling units have been sanctioned.
All costs for housing cannot be met by the Government and, therefore, there is need to attract private investment.
It is not just the availability of finance which is problematic as far as housing is concerned since availability of land itself is the most crucial issue.
Scarcity of land is the result of sub-optimal land use patterns largely induced by the regulatory regime in place, lack of long term urban planning and lack of participatory planning process.
The National Urban Transport Policy 2006 calls for increasing the share of public transport in our cities from 22% to 60%.The Study (2008) conducted by the Ministry of Urban Development estimated that public transport had accounted for only 27% of the urban transport in India. In the 12th Plan, the aim must be to raise the share of public transport to at least 50%of all motorized trips. A key challenge to generate non-budgetary resources to fund transport projects especially through land based instruments needs to be devised. The Ministry of Urban Development should initiate a proposal for setting up an apex institution viz. the National Urban Rail Transit Authority. The Ministry of Urban Development should also initiate a proposal for setting up a Center of Excellence for Rail based Mass Transit system which should promote research in civil net-work, rolling stock, tracks and signaling etc. All metro projects which are in high density corridors and are viable on their own may be encouraged under People – Private – Public Partnership mode.
As regards water supply, the target for the 12th Plan period should be: i. Universalization of water and sanitation of urban areas
· Reduction in unaccounted water i.e. Non- revenue water (NRW)
· 100% metering of water supply
· Ensuring 24x7 water supply
· Take an integrated view of water supply and sanitation
For solid waste management, some of the important issues are:
· Absence of segregation of waste at source
· Lack of funds for waste management at Urban Local Bodies.
· Lack of technical expertise and appropriate institutional arrangement
· Unwillingness of Urban Local Bodies to introduce appropriate collection, segregation, transportation etc.
· Indifference of citizens towards waste management due to lack of awareness
The people of India are largely the descendants of immigrants from across the Himalayas. It is still debated whether any native race evolved on Indian soil.
We know that the species known as Ramapithecus was found in the Siwalik foothills of the north-western Himalayas. The species believed to be the first in the line of hominids (human family) lived some 14 million years ago. Recent researches have shown that a species resembling the Australopithicus lived in India some 2 million years ago. Even this discovery leaves an evolutionary gap of as much as 12 million years since Ramapithecus.
Very little research has been done regarding the ethnic origins of the Indian population perhaps it is of little importance now. The fact is that the Indian population is polygenetic and is a confusing mixture of various racial strains. Few, if any, can claim to belong to any particular stock.
We are giving below descriptions of the various races in India according to the classical pattern.
The population of India is derived from the following racial groups and sub-groups :-
1. The Negritos.
2. The Proto-Australoids.
3. The Mongoloids .
i) Palaeo-Mongoloids :
a) long-headed type
b) broad-headed type
ii) Tibeto-Mongoloids
4. The Mediterranean :
i) Palaeo-Mediterranean
ii) Mediterranean
iii) The so-called oriental sub-type of the Mediterraneans.
5. The western broad-headed people of Brachycephals
i) Alpinoids
ii) Dinarics
iii) Armenoids
6. The Nordics
Negritos are a short statured type of human race, believed to have entered India in the earliest times. Tribal groups such as Kadars and Puliyans living in the hills and forests of the Indian Peninsula and Andaman Islands constitute the Negrito race in India. Their characteristic features are :
i) Woolly hair
ii) Bulbous forehead
iii) Broad flat nose
iv) Slightly protruding jaws.
It is believe that Proto-Australoids entered India soon after Negritos. The Indus-Valley Civilization was built by them. This has been established by the skeletons discovered from the burial grounds both at Mohen - jo - daro and Harappa.
Hilly and forested tracts of central, south and north India are the major parts where this type of race has settled down. In North India, they form the lower stratum of the society.
Their characteristics include the following traits and resemble the negritos except that there is absence of woolly hair in them:
i) Bulbous forehead
ii) Broad flat nose
iii) Slightly protruding jaws.
The original home-land of the Mongoloid race was China from where they were pushed southward into the Malaya peninsula and Indonesia. They entered India through the passes in the northern or eastern mountains. Presently, they occupy large areas of Laddakh, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Tripura, Nagaland and Mizoram.
The Mongoloid racial stock of India can be dived into two sub-groups as follows :-
i) Palaeo-Mongoloids
ii) Tibeto-Mongoloids.
i) Palaeo-Mongoloids are further divided into broad-headed and long-headed sub-types. They settled mainly along the fringes of the Himalayan in Assam and the Myanmar border.
ii) Tibeto-Mongoloids have come from Tibet as their name suggests. They are mostly living in Bhutan and Sikkim, as well as in the north-western Himalayas and Trans-Himalayan regions.
The Mediterraneans came to India from south-west Asia. It is from this region that during the third and second millennium B.C., the Mediterranean race gradually spread over the surrounding areas. They are divided into three distinct sub-groups :
iii) So-called Oriental Type
i) Palaeo-Mediterranean- Palaeo Mediterranean is the first sub-type of the Mediterranean human race which entered India in the most ancient times. They first settled down in north-western India and are believed to have started agricultural practice there. Later on subsequent immigrations forced them to move to central and southern India. Now - a - days the bulk or population living in southern and northern India are of Palaeo-Mediterranean type of human race. Their characteristics are :
a) Medium stature
b) Long head
c) Dark skin
ii) Mediterranean This sub-type is considered to be the main stream of the Mediterranean race which entered India a little later. They also settled in the north-western parts of India and are believed to be the builders of Indus-Valley Civilization along with the Proto-Australoids. They introduced the first metal or bronze cultures in India roughly between 2500 to 1500 B.C. Later immigrations of human races pushed them into the Ganga plains and even beyond the Vindhyan mountain ranges.Now-a-days, the bulk of Scheduled Castes in North India is constituted by this race.
iii) So-called Oriental Type This type of the Mediterraneans entered India in the last. Now-a-days, they constitute the majority of the population of Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Western U.P. According to anthropologists, the mediterraneans came to India with a fair high level of Civilization and believed to be the bearer of earliest form of Hindustan into India.
Brachycephal groups of races of India are characterized with broad heads. Coorgis and Parsis are representatives of the Brachycephals in India. These races are sub-divided into three major groups. They followed three different routes to enter India :
ii) Dinarics and
iii) Armenoids.
i) Alpinoids. Alpinoids came to India along the route passing through Baluchistan, Sind, Kathiawar, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.
ii) Dinarics. Dinarics followed the Ganga valley and its delta as their route to enter India.
iii) Armenoids. Chitral, Gilgit, Kashmir and Nepal formed the third route for the Armneids of the Brachcephal group of races to enter India.
The Nordics constitute the last wave of migration into India. They spoke Aryan language and migrated to India sometime during the second millennium B.C. The main concentration of these people is in the north-western part of the country. They are a predominant type in the North Western Frontier Province of Pakistan, Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan. They are mostly represented among the upper-castes of North India particularly in Punjab. The characteristics of this race are as under:-
i) Long head
ii) Fair complexion
iii) Well-developed nose.
iv) Well - built strong body.
India is a ‘Babel of languages’. The 1931 census showed that 225 Indian and Burmese languages were spoken in India, but the great majority of these were merely tribal dialects spoken by a few hundred or, at most, a few thousand people. The 1961 census listed 1652 languages as mother tongues and the 1971 census has merely reproduced the same list. There has been no additional information since then.
The variety of languages has been built up through the ages by various races and ethnic groups that made their way into India. There are 15 major languages in India. Some of these are closely allied and may be grouped together : Tamil,
Malayalam, Telugu and Kannada as Dravidian languages ; and Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, Gujarati, Marathi, etc. as the Indo-Aryan family.
Linguistic composition(2001)
No.
Language
Percentage to
total population
1
Hindi
41.03
2
Bengali
8.11
3
Telugu
7.19
4
Marathi
6.99
5
Tamil
5.91
6
Urdu
5.01
7
Gujarati
4.48
8
Kannada
3.69
9
Malayalam
3.21
10
Oriya
11
Punjabi
2.83
12
Assamese
1.28
13
Maithili
1.18
14
Santali
0.63
15
Kashmiri
0.54
16
Nepali
0.28
17
Sindhi
0.25
18
Konkani
0.24
19
Dogri
0.22
20
Manipuri *
0.14
21
Bodo
0.13
22
Sanskrit
N
The fifteen major languages are statutorily recognized and listed in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution. Fourteen of them are designated National Languages; of these fourteen, twelve are official languages of various states in the country. The ancient tongue, Sanskrit, the 15th scheduled language is the mother of Indo-European languages and is a source of vocabulary to many more languages even outside India. Being a classified language it is taught in schools along with Persian and Arabic. There are also scores of non-scheduled languages spoken in the country. The 1971 Census listed the number of speakers of eighty-nine non-scheduled languages and accounted for those who spoke other non-scheduled languages under the heading ‘other mother tongues’. Only recently three more languages-Manipuri, Nepali and Konkani have been included in the 8th Schedule.
The major division among India’s languages is that between the Dravidian tongues of south and the Indo-Aryan ones of north and central India. The Indo-Aryan languages are spoken by about three-quarters (74 per cent) of the population of the country. Hindi, with its variations, ranks numerically as on of the major languages of the world, with an estimated 200 million speakers. Spearheaded by the Hindi film it is now emerging as the lingua franca of India, besides being the official language of the Indian Union. It is one of the world’s to five languages, the others being Chinese, English, Russian and Spanish. English continues to be the associate language of the Indian Union. It has also been adopted as the official language by a couple of states
in the northeastern part of the country. This ensures that English will continue to occupy its present position at the Union - level.
Seven of the national languages, in terms of number of speakers, find a place in the top 20 languages of the world. Projecting official 1971 figures for speakers of these languages into 1982 it would appear that about 55 million Indians speak Bengali (the 6th most spoken language in the world), 55 m speak Telugu (13th in the world), Marathi 53 m (15th), Tamil 45 m (19th), Urdu 36 m (16th). The other national languages which figure in the next 20 world languages are Gujarati (33 m), Kannada (28 m), Malayalam (26 m), and Oriya (24 m). Assamese, Sindhi, Kashmiri and Sanskrit are scheduled languages with less than 10 million speakers each.
A decadal comparison of the languages of India, by proportion of speakers to total population, indicates that the percentage of speakers for Hindi, Telugu and Tamil has declined gradually over the two decades between 1951 and 1971. On the other hand, Punjabi and Urdu have shown noticeable increase in their percentages though the per cent of Urdu speakers decreased marginally between 1961 and 1971. Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, Malayalam and Assamese have also increased their percentages, marginally. Kannada, Kashmiri and Sindhi have remained at the same level. The ‘other’ languages have also come down in their aggregate shares over this period.
Since the states of the Union are generally language-based, the scheduled languages are spoken by the largest majorities of population in most states. In Kerala, for instance, 96 per cent of the population speak Malayalam, and in Andhra Pradesh 85.4 per cent of the population speak Telugu. But curiously, in two states listed as Hindi speaking, Rajasthan and Bihar, the languages spoken by substantial numbers do not find a place among the scheduled or non-scheduled languages. In 1961, Rajasthan listed 57 per cent of its population as Rajasthani speakers and Bihar listed 36 per cent of its people as Maithili/Bhojpuri/Magadhi. These and many more are treated as dialects of Hindi, although they have their literature too.
Indian languages merge into each other and are not separated by hard and fast boundaries. There is an intermingling of languages as well as cultures among the various linguistic groups. Nine out of every ten persons speak at least one of the fourteen spoken scheduled languages. People are often bi-lingual in most areas. This bi-or-tri-lingualism is widespread among all classes except the peasantry of linguistically homogeneous areas.
India’s population comprises a diversity of ethnic and religious groups. Among these are the groups listed in the Constitution as Scheduled Castes and Tribes whose welfare and progress, through legislation and other measures, is the special responsibility of the central and state governments.
Member of the Scheduled castes are mainly of Hindu stock. Several, however, have moved out of this classification by professing Buddhism (as in Maharashtra) or Christianity (as in the southern states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu). By and large, the members of the Scheduled Castes are not ethnically different from neighboring Hindu Communities, they have only been socially disadvantaged in the past. They are generally found in large numbers in coastal area (e.g. fisherman) and in the plains where they work as landless laborers.
The largest community neither specifically Hindu nor Muslim is the one that is rather vaguely labeled as ‘Scheduled Tribes’, not necessarily because they are tribal or live in the back of the beyond, but because their origins are tribal and they profess none of the major religions of the subcontinent. These ‘tribes’ are generally found in the hilly and jungle tracts, their concentration being especially great in districts covering the Vindhyas and Satpura ranges in Central India and Chotanagpur, Western and Eastern Ghats and the North eastern hills.
These scheduled Tribes derive from the four major human stocks; Negroid Australoid, Mongoloid and Caucasoid. There is evidence of Australoid stock in the tribal population of the south and the centre (e.g. the Mundas and Santals, south the Narmada-Chota Nagpur line). The tribal people of the north, on the other hand, show marked Mongoloid characteristics. They occupy a broad band of country from Laddakh in Kashmir through Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh.
India has 3000 and more castes. The salient feature of the caste system is that it is intensely hierarchical even today. Rigid as the system is in rural India, the Scheduled Castes (the ‘Untouchables’) have improved their position, mainly through ideologically-inspired administrative fiats of government and local political bodies. Today, the Scheduled Castes and others classified as Backward Classes have greater opportunities to break out of restrictions of caste and become upwardly mobile.
The Scheduled Castes and Tribes population has been increasing steadily since 1951, not only in numbers but also in proportion to the overall population. The Scheduled Castes population was 64 million in 1961, 80 million in 1971, 105 million in 1981 and 158 million in 1991, their share in the national population growing by 1.1 per cent. As per the 1991 census the proportion of SC and ST population to the total population is about 16% and 8% respectively. The tribal population is smaller but it has increased at about the same rate; 30 million in 1961, 38 million in 1971 and 52 million in 1981, their share growing by 1%. The literates among the scheduled castes in 1981 comprised about 16.9 million males and 5.5 million females while among the Tribes it was 6.4 million males and just about 2 million females. Female literacy was below the all-India average (24.8%) in both cases; male literacy was only slightly better when compared with all-India average of 46.9%.
Sr. No.
Name of Tribe
State
1.
Abors
Arunachal Pradesh
2.
Baigas
Madhya Pradesh
3.
Bhils
MP and Rajasthan
4.
Bhots
Himachal Pradesh
5.
Bhotias
Garhwal and Kumaon
6.
Chakmas
Tripura
7.
Chenchus
Andhra Pradesh and Orissa
8.
Gaddis
9.
Garos
Meghalaya
10.
Gonds
MP, Bihar, Orissa and HP
11.
Gujjars
Himachal Pradesh & Rajasthan
12.
Jarawas
Little Andamans
13.
Khasas
Jaunsar-Babar in UP
14.
Khasis
Assam and Meghalaya
15.
Khonds
Orissa
16.
Kols
17.
Kotas
Nilgiri (TN)
18.
Kukis
Arunachal Pradesh and Manipur
19.
Lepchas
Sikkim
20.
Lushais
Mizoram
21.
Murias
Bastar (MP)
22.
Mikirs
Assam
23.
Mundas
Bihar, Orissa, W.B.
24.
Nagas
Manipur and Nagaland
25.
Onges
Andaman & Nicobar Islands
26.
Santhals
Bihar, Orissa and W.B.
27.
Sentinelese
SentinelIsland& Andaman& Nicobar
28.
Shompens
Andaman & Nicobar
29.
Todas
Nilgire (T.N.)
30.
Uralis
Kerala
Nearly half the Scheduled Castes working population of 37.8 million are agricultural workers, employed by others, while more than half the tribal working population of 22 million are cultivators, working for themselves. Cultivators among the Schedules Castes account for only a little more than a quarter of their numbers, while agricultural workers among the Tribes are about one third. Other Workers’ are 20.3% and 11.5% of the Scheduled Castes and Tribes working population respectively. Negligible numbers in both groups are in any kind of modern occupations like industry.
A very substantial proportion of scheduled Castes is found in Kooch Bihar district in the north-east. In nine districts in the north-Jalpaipuri in West Bengal, Mirzapur, Sitapur and Unnao in Uttar Pradesh, two districts of Himachal Pradesh, and three districts of the Punjab - the share of Scheduled Castes is more than a third of the total district population. In the tribal north-east and Jammu & Kashmir the share of Scheduled Castes is the lowest below 1% of district population.
In at least a third of the districts in the country, especially in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, the Scheduled Castes population is between 15 and 25 per cent. This would amount to several thousands in a district and, in some cases, in such heavily populated areas as Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, can even exceed 3,00,000 in a district. The districts with Scheduled Castes comprising only 0.5 per cent of the population are in Western India, mainly in Maharashtra. This population has been substantially reduced in this area with the conversion of many to Buddhism after independence, influenced by their leader Dr. B.R. Ambedkar. The tribal belts of Central India in Madhya Pradesh and Orissa also have very small scheduled Castes Populations.
Whereas the Scheduled Castes population is distributed widely within a particular district, the Tribes are more usually found in concentrated groups, occupying in some cases a stretch of villages and hamlets. These concentrations of Tribes are generally to be found in forested hills and ranges. The Tribes are thus often referred to as ‘hill’ people. The districts in the north-eastern Assam-Burma hills, three districts in Madhya Pradesh, The Dangs in Gujarat, a couple of districts in Himachal Pradesh and the Union territories of Lakshadweep, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and the Nicobar Islands have the highest concentrations of tribals (60-100 per cent). Other significant concentrations (40-60 per cent) are in southern Gujarat and the Chota Nagpur plateau of southern Bihar, northern Orissa and eastern Madhya Pradesh. The districts - around the hill areas also have a fair concentration of tribals because of tribal migrants. Most of Uttar Pradesh, northern Bihar, southern Tamil Nadu, coastal Kerala and the Saurashtra peninsula in Gujarat have minute tribal populations. Punjab, Haryana and Jammu & Kashmir have no tribal populations.
Three distinct regions of tribal population in India may be identified:
I. The north and north-eastern zone, which consists of the sub-Himalayan region and the mountain ranges of the Eastern Frontiers of India of the TistaValley, and the Jamuna-Padma portion of the Brahmaputra. The easternmost tribal concentration is found in Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Manipur and Tripura. The tribal areas of eastern Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Terai area of U.P. also fall in this zone. In this zone live 4.68 million tribes, forming 12.33% of the total tribal population. The important tribes in this region are Aka, Dafla, Miri, Gurung, Mishmi, Naga, Kukis Lushais, Khasis, Garos, Lepchas, Bhoksa, Khasa, Bhunia, Majhi, etc.
ii. The central or the Middle zone consists of plateaus and mountainous belts between the Indo-Gangetic plain to the north and roughly the Krishna river to the north. In this zone, we have another massing of tribal people in M.P. with extensions in U.P, southern Rajasthan, northern Gujarat, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa. Southern Gujarat and Bastar form the peripheral areas of the zone. The tribes living in this region form the largest assemblage of India’s aboriginal population numbering 30.7 millions or 81.05% of the total tribal population. The important tribes inhabiting this zone are the Savara, Jadaba and Bondo of the Ganjam district, the Juang, Kharia, Khand, Bhumij and the Bhuiya of the Orissa hills, the Mundas, the Santhals, the Oraons, the Hos and the Bixhors in the Chhotanagpur plateau, the Kattaris, Kols and the Bhils along the Vindhya ranges and the Gonds in M.P. and Andhra Pradesh.
iii. The southern zone fall south of the river Krishna stretching from Wynaad to Cape Comorin. Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu fall in this zone. This zone contains 2.46 million tribal people, i.e. 6.49% of the total tribal population. The important tribes of this zone are the Chenchus of the Nellaimallois hills across the Krishna into Andhra Pradesh, Todas living in the lower slopes of Coorg Hills, the Irulas, Chenchus, Paniyans and Kurumbas of Wynaad etc.
In addition to these major zones, there is a fourth small and isolated zone consisting of Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The main tribes living in this zone are the Jarawas, Onge, North Sentinelese, the Andamanese and the Nicobarese. This zone contains only 47.6 thousand thousand tribals, i.e., about 0.13% of the total tribal population.
Scheduled Castes :
166,635,700
16.2%
Scheduled Tribes :
84,326,240
8.2%
Scheduled Castes
State with highest proportion of Scheduled Castes
Punjab( 28.9 %)
State with lowest proportion of Scheduled Castes
Mizoram ( 0.03 %)
UT with highest proportion of Scheduled Castes
Chandigarh (17.5%)
UT with lowest proportion of Scheduled Castes
D and N Haveli (1.9% )
District with highest proportion of Scheduled Castes
Koch-Bihar (50.1%)
District with lowest proportion of Scheduled Castes
Lawngtlai Mizoram (0.01%)
Scheduled Tribes
State with highest proportion of Scheduled Tribes
Mizoram ( 94.5 % )
State with lowest proportion of Scheduled Tribes
Goa (0.04 %)
UT with highest proportion of Scheduled Tribes
Lakshadweep (94.5 %)
UT with lowest proportion of Scheduled Tribes
A and N Islands (8.3 %)
District with highest proportion of Scheduled Tribes
Sarchhip, Mizoram ( 98.1%)
District with lowest proportion of Scheduled Tribes
Hathras, Uttar Pradesh (0.01%)
[1] SRS-2012
[2] For more indepth analysis of census 2011 data, refer to http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011census/population_enumeration.aspx
[3] To work out the proportion of male working population, the data relating to main workers were taken into account.
[4] At the 1961 Census, the concept of 'Town Group' was adopted to obtain a broad picture relating to urban spread. This was refined in 1971 with the concepts of 'Urban Agglomeration' to obtain better feed back in regard to urban contiguity, processes and trends of urbanisation and other related matters.
[5] Find out new data fron Census of India
[6]Ministry of Urban Employment and Poverty Alleviationrenamed as Ministry of housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation from 2004.
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