Relevance: GS-2 (Governance), GS-3 (Internal Security); Sources: The Hindu, MHA LWE Reports, PESA Act

Key Takeaways

  • India’s LWE decline is a security win, but governance gaps remain deep.
  • PESA + Fifth Schedule reforms are core to long-term stabilisation.
  • Trust-building, representation and service delivery will decide LWE’s future trajectory.

Context

India has reduced Left-Wing Extremism (LWE) incidents by 77% since 2010 and shrunk LWE-affected districts to 45 (from 126 in 2010). Yet, the real challenge ahead is not military—it is rebuilding governance, rights, and trust in historically neglected tribal belts.

Why Maoism Persisted – Governance Deficits

1. Absence of the State

Tribal regions still lack schools, PHCs, banking, mobile connectivity, land records, transport & justice systems. This vacuum enabled Maoists to establish parallel courts (Jan Adalats) and exert social control.

2. Weak Implementation of Protective Laws

PESA Act (1996) and Fifth Schedule protections remain nominal:

  • Gram Sabhas have limited control over land acquisition, forest produce, and policing.
  • Forest rights (FRA 2006) remain under-implemented.

3. Representation and Cultural Distance

Low tribal representation in police, forest staff & district administration widens mistrust. Improper communication in non-tribal languages worsens alienation.

4. Security–Development Imbalance

Mining, road projects, and forest clearances often proceed without meaningful consent. Displacement and environmental loss fuel resentment even when violence falls.

What Post-Maoist Governance Should Look Like

  • Governance-first, not security-first, in stabilised districts.
  • Fully empower Gram Sabhas under PESA; community control over minor forest produce.
  • Improve last-mile services: mobile courts, basic health, nutrition, timely MGNREGA payments, road & digital connectivity.
  • Recruit local tribal youth in education, police and forest services.
  • Adopt participatory development with women’s collectives, SHGs & tribal councils.

Conclusion

The “post-Maoist” challenge is restoring dignity and democratic rights to India’s most marginalised citizens. Sustainable peace demands justice, self-governance and basic services, not merely force.

Peace endures only when governance reaches where insurgency once ruled.

UPSC Value Box 

Why this issue matters?

  • Shows how governance failure creates security threats.
  • Highlights rights of tribal and marginalised communities.
  • Links development, decentralisation and justice with national security.

Analytical Insight: Over-reliance on policing without addressing land alienation, service gaps and exclusion risks resurgence of extremism.

Reforms: Strengthen PESA, forest rights, and Gram Sabha authority; ensure local recruitment + participatory planning for sustainable peace.

Q. “Critically examine how governance reforms, especially PESA and Fifth Schedule provisions, are central to consolidating gains in India’s post-Maoist regions.”

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