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Social justice and tribal India: Beyond Marxist determinism to a moral choice for socialism

By Trinadha Rao  
The intellectual tradition of socialism, particularly in its Marxist form, has long emphasized the role of economic structures and productive forces in shaping human history. Yet, as critical voices have pointed out, this approach often reduces complex human realities to economic determinism, neglecting the moral, cultural, and psychological dimensions of human existence.
When viewed in the context of India’s tribal societies, the limits of classical Marxist thought become even more evident. Tribal experiences reveal that socialism, if it is to have meaning, must be consciously chosen as a moral and cultural framework, not assumed as the inevitable result of economic crises or historical progression.
Human Nature, Morality, and Tribal Societies
Marxism places labour at the heart of civilization, but tribal life demonstrates that societies are also built upon moral choices, cultural norms, and values of reciprocity. Many tribal communities practice forms of collective ownership and decision-making that resemble socialist ideals. However, these practices arise not from deterministic economic laws but from consciously cultivated traditions of solidarity and mutual support.
Recently, the author visited a predominantly Savara (Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group) village—Manapuram in Seethampet Mandal of Parvathipuram Manyam District—to attend a legal awareness meeting on the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA). The villagers arrived late because, as is customary, when someone builds a house slab, the entire community comes together to help, with the house owner providing meals in return. This simple practice reflects fraternity and constitutional values in action.
The Supreme Court’s ruling in Orissa Mining Corporation v. Ministry of Environment & Forests (2013)—the Niyamgiri case—illustrates this point. The Court vested final authority in the Gram Sabha of the Dongria Kondh tribe to decide whether mining in the sacred Niyamgiri Hills could proceed. This recognition of customary and moral authority highlights that cooperation and collective ownership are cultural and moral choices, not merely economic arrangements.
Historically, the customary association of tribal people with land has often taken the form of collective ownership of forest and land resources. Colonial rulers systematically replaced these community rights with individual property rights, thereby making tribal communities vulnerable.
The challenge arises when external systems—capitalist markets, extractive industries, land administration, or state-driven development projects—impose alien values of profit and hierarchy. The disruption of moral economies weakens cooperative traditions. Thus, socialism in the tribal context is not simply about redistribution of land or resources but about safeguarding and nurturing cultural values that make cooperation possible.
Beyond Marxist Determinism: The Persistence of Capitalism and Exploitation
Classical Marxism assumed that capitalism would collapse under its contradictions. Yet capitalism has proven remarkably adaptive, even in tribal areas. Land alienation, mining, deforestation, and commercial agriculture have encroached upon tribal economies, but rather than giving rise to socialist consciousness, they often produce dislocation, despair, or authoritarian solutions.
The Samatha v. State of Andhra Pradesh (1997) judgment revealed both the dangers and possibilities here. The Court held that lands in Scheduled Areas could not be leased to non-tribals or private companies for mining. Only state entities or tribal cooperatives could undertake such activity. By protecting tribal land from external exploitation, the Court reinforced the principle that socialism in tribal areas must mean preserving community ownership and autonomy rather than allowing capitalism to deepen its roots through dispossession.
Just as the rise of fascism in Europe disproved the Marxist faith in historical inevitability, the persistence of exploitation in India’s tribal areas demonstrates that economic suffering does not automatically translate into collective struggles for equality. Instead, capitalism adapts—absorbing tribal labour into precarious markets while eroding their traditional safety nets.
Human Will, Psychological Realities, and Socialism
Marxist theory often overlooks the fact that cooperation is not a natural, effortless human tendency. Tribal societies show both sides of this truth. On the one hand, they embody remarkable traditions of cooperation through practices such as collective farming, community decision-making, and the sharing of forest produce. On the other hand, even within these communities, tendencies toward inequality, gender hierarchies, and conflict persist.
This reality was recognized in Ram Charan v. Sukhram (2025), where the Supreme Court held that a tribal woman was entitled to equal inheritance in ancestral property. The Court ruled that in the absence of a valid customary prohibition, principles of justice, equity, and good conscience must prevail. By upholding gender equality within tribal societies, the judgment demonstrates that socialism cannot ignore internal inequities. For tribal societies to embrace socialism meaningfully, they must consciously confront gender discrimination and hierarchy within, not only resist exploitation from outside.
If socialism depends on voluntary cooperation, it requires more than structural change—it requires a conscious moral and cultural choice. In tribal regions, where caste discrimination from outside communities, gender inequities within, and generational aspirations for urban migration all play roles, a realistic socialism must address psychological needs for security, recognition, and dignity.
Revolutionary Optimism and Tribal Realities
Revolutionary thought often assumes that removing oppression will automatically produce socialist consciousness. Yet tribal experiences show otherwise. Merely abolishing exploitative landlords or restraining corporate mining does not guarantee that communities will adopt egalitarian practices.
The State of Punjab v. Davinder Singh (2024) case illustrates this insight in a broader context. The Court held that States could sub-classify Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for reservation benefits so that the most disadvantaged among them do not remain excluded. This ruling reflects the reality that within marginalized groups, inequalities persist, and that social justice requires conscious policy choices, not the assumption that collective categories are inherently egalitarian.
People also desire stability, prestige, and personal advancement. The lure of wage labour in cities, the appeal of consumer goods, and the promise of upward mobility often outweigh collective ideals. In this sense, socialism in tribal areas is harder to sustain than revolutionaries imagine—it requires sacrifices not just of wealth but of entrenched privileges and aspirations.
Towards a Realistic Socialism in Tribal Areas
A realistic socialism for tribal societies must acknowledge both the strengths and limits of human nature. Solidarity exists, but it coexists with fear, competition, and self-interest. Socialism cannot depend on economic crises to generate cooperative consciousness; rather, it must be cultivated through education, culture, and institutions that reinforce values of justice and equality.
In India’s tribal areas, a realistic socialism must begin with the strengthening of Gram Sabhas under the PESA Act, 1996, and the Forest Rights Act, 2006. The Supreme Court in Niyamgiri reaffirmed that Gram Sabhas are not mere administrative units but foundational institutions of self-rule, capable of deciding matters of culture, livelihood, and identity. They must evolve as living schools of democratic culture, where collective decision-making becomes both a practice and a value.
At the same time, the protection of common resources—forests, water, and land—is essential, for these are not just sources of livelihood but the very foundations of solidarity and autonomy in tribal life. The Samatha judgment underlines this imperative by preventing alienation of land in Scheduled Areas.
Yet, the journey towards social justice also demands introspection within tribal societies themselves. Internal inequalities—such as gender discrimination and the lingering influence of caste—need to be confronted. The Ram Charan ruling shows how the law can help dismantle inequities from within, reminding us that customs must evolve in line with equality and dignity. Without such internal transformation, socialism risks being reduced to resistance against external forces while reproducing hierarchies from within.
Equally important is the task of building cultural confidence. Tribal values of reciprocity, care, and community must be preserved and renewed so that they are not eroded by the allure of consumerist aspirations. Only by nurturing these moral and cultural strengths alongside institutional safeguards can socialism take root in tribal regions as a conscious and sustainable choice.
Conclusion: Socialism as a Moral Choice
For tribal societies, socialism is not the “destiny” of history, but a deliberate choice to preserve values of solidarity in the face of exploitation and disintegration. It is not enough to rely on economic contradictions or revolutionary optimism; socialism must be nurtured through moral will, cultural affirmation, and institutional safeguards.
Supreme Court rulings such as Samatha (1997), Niyamgiri (2013), Ram Charan (2025), and Davinder Singh (2024) all show that the law itself recognizes this dual task: protecting communities from external exploitation while also pushing for internal equity and justice.
In this sense, social justice in tribal India cannot simply be about redressing economic inequalities—it must engage deeply with the human condition, with aspirations and fears, with traditions of cooperation and tendencies toward hierarchy. Only then can a socialism rooted in tribal realities be both meaningful and sustainable.
The idea of socialism and social justice, particularly in the context of tribal communities in India, must therefore rest on culture, morality, self-rule, and internal change—not merely on economic restructuring.

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