Indian Exclusion Report 2016

2016 report has focused on access of 4 public goods:

  • Pensions for the elderly
  • Digital access
  • Agricultural land
  • Legal justice for undertrial

Findings:

  • Landholding pattern
    • Large landowners belong to the upper castes
    • Cultivators to the middle castes
    • Agricultural workers to Dalits and Adivasis
    • Highest landlessness was among Dalits (~57%)
    • Around 40% of all displaced by developmental activity were Adivasis
    • Dalits own poor quality land only
    • Land reform efforts have not benefited Dalits, women or Muslims significantly
    • Land allotments to SC/ST households were often only on paper, as allottees were forcefully evicted or not allowed to take possession
  • Digital access
    • Poverty and geographic location were the two major barriers to digital access, with urban locations enjoying better Internet penetration rates
    • Government Efforts are facing implementation problems like poor infrastructure, a lack of adequate institutional frameworks, low literacy in the targeted areas, and poor cooperation from government

Conclusion:

The groups most severely and consistently excluded from provisioning tend to the same historically disadvantaged groups: Dalits, Adivasis, Muslims, and persons with disabilities and age-related vulnerabilities

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