Caste Diversity in Indian Development Sector: Does it Exist?
<http://roundtableindia.co.in/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=8176:diversity-deficit-in-indian-development-sector&catid=119:feature&Itemid=132>
Written by Karthik Navayan

Published on 06 May 2015

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*Karthik Navayan*

*Gramsci uses the analogy of civil society as a system of trenches and
redoubts surrounding the state1. All political attempts by the
underprivileged classes--castes in Indian context--to overcome the barriers
are drowned by the development sector that claims for itself the status of
the civil society. Does the civil society, popularly understood as NGO
sector, act as the entry point of marginalized sections into better social
positions? We need to think about this aspect seriously because those who
were fed up by government and corporate sector are increasingly turning
towards the development sector because it looks fancy, politically correct,
without realising that in fact it can be equally hegemonic. The hegemony of
the civil society is nowhere more visible than in *its* reinforcing the
existing social norms of hierarchy in their day-to-day activities. It is
starkly visible in their staffing practices, which prefer people of
privileged backgrounds especially in important positions. This paper
critically views the aid agencies' mainstream perception of caste
discourse, and their lack of will to be inclusive by incorporating the
members of the marginalised communities into policymaking bodies. Moreover,
I argue that any developmental intervention without the active
participation of marginalised communities will be a charade in the name of
charity.*

*[image: why do you worry about caste]*

*Social diversity in public and private sectors in India*

Caste is the greatest social reality in India that produces inequality and
poverty with its hierarchical social structures, by keeping people from
marginalised communities away from accessing resources and power centres.
Therefore, any attempt at bringing equality must deal with caste. The
participation of people from the marginalised communities should be a
precondition. Defining the caste divide in Indian social life, Dr B.R.
Ambedkar, the chairperson of the drafting committee of Constitution of
India put it this way:

*"There is no nation of Indians in the real sense of the world; it is yet
to be created. In believing we are a nation, we are cherishing a great
delusion. How can people divided into thousands of castes be a nation? The
sooner we realise that we are not yet a nation, in a social and
psychological sense of the world, the better for us".2*

However, the Brahmanical governing class in India cherishes the delusion
that India is a nation, refusing to acknowledge the fact that the Indian
society is divided on caste lines. Every caste has its own distinct social
practices governed by the Brahmanical framework of social, economic and
political hierarchies. This reality makes it impossible for any caste to
represent another caste as social interests are hierarchized. This makes
equality an impossible ideal in political practice even in civil society.

When Indian National Congress and its leader M.K.Gandhi claimed that they
represent all castes including the ex-untouchables before the British,
during Round Table Conferences3, Dr Ambedkar pointed out that:* "The
Congress has been, loudly and insistently claiming that it is the only
political organisation in India, which is representative of the people of
India. At one time, it used to claim that it represents the Musalmans also.
This it does not now do, at any rate not so loudly and insistently. But so
far as the Untouchables are concerned, the Congress maintains most
vehemently that it does represent them. On the other hand, the non-Congress
political parties have always denied this claim. This is particularly true
of the Untouchables who have never hesitated to repudiate the Congress
claim to represent them"*4.

Hence, Ambedkar demanded fair representation in the entire system of
governance and administration, but Gandhi, the leader of caste Hindus
blackmailed Dr. Ambedkar and made him sign the Poona Pact5 on 24th
September 1932. Thus, the term "reservations6", widely adopted by the
government functionaries, media and academicians, instead of the more
dignified "representation." But, the reservation policy remained on paper,
the Brahmanical governing class of India consciously resisted in many ways
the implementation of reservations for the Scheduled Caste (SC), Scheduled
Tribe (ST), and Other Backward Classes (OBC). It never honoured in practice
the reservations as the Constitutional principle of social justice.
Instead, it has adopted different strategies to recruit their own kith and
kin in the positions of power reserved for SC, ST and OBC categories. The
SC, ST and OBCs have reservations, but Brahmins and their allied castes
have "*preservations*", as one Dalit activist put it.

Many studies pointed out that 94.01% of the judges in Supreme Court, the
apex court of India and High Courts, the federal courts are Brahmins and
their Brahmanic7 allied dominant castes. According to a survey by
*Outlook* magazine
in 2007, Brahmins are a micro minority community that constitutes 5.6% of
the total population of India, but they occupied 47% of chief justice posts
and 40% of associate justice positions between 1950 to 20008. Around 75-90%
of the Class-I-Class-II officers in the Indian administration, professors,
lecturers and readers in all government-funded central and state
universities are from Brahmin and Brahmanic allied dominant castes. 88% of
most significant positions in the media are also occupied by the same castes
9.

More than 80% of the land holdings, including other resources and means of
production rest with Brahmanic dominant castes. "In 1991, 70% of the total
SC households were landless or near landless (owning less than one acre).
This increased to 75% in 2000. In 1991, 13% of the rural SC households were
landless. However, in 2000 this saw a decline and was 10%. As per the
Agricultural Census of 1995-96, the bottom 61.6% of operational holdings
accounted for only 17.2% of the total operated land area. As against this,
the top 7.3% of operational holdings accounted for 40.1% of the total
operated area. This gives an indication of land concentration in the hands
of a few10.

Despite the fact that the practice of reservations system has been on for
more than half a century, the total strength of SC, ST and OBCs in central
and state government jobs are around 20%, but they constitute 85% of the
people. "The backlog in Dalit and Tribal appointments reported to be 25,000
in the State (the state here is Tamil Nadu and the similar situation
prevails in other states too) and 1,000,000 in Union Government services.
Some vacancies have not been filled since 1978. Reported by National
Daily- *The
Hindu*, Feb 2, 1999"11. This is the story of the public sector. When it
comes to the private sector, which is answerable to none, the story is
worse.

*Development Sector: Neither social diversity nor transparency*

The scenario portrayed above is not limited to the public sector. The
development sector, which varyingly calls itself as civil society, the NGO
and the voluntary sector, does the same thing. The sector, which claims to
be working for the welfare of the marginalised, is disproportionately
occupied and operated by privileged sections with Brahmanic cultural
capital. They act as bleeding hearts out to work for the welfare of Dalits
and Adivasis before the international donor agencies; they write policies
and strategies, and they make interventions for the sake of the
marginalised communities. However, none of these processes involve those
affected sections that they claim to represent. When a privileged caste
individual wants to work for the unprivileged castes he or she should
accept the fact that they are from the privileged caste; that their
privilege is the reason for the production of marginalisation of others.
They should not hide their social position, their caste and their
activities against marginalisation before the respective communities. In
the absence of such disclosure, their work for the marginalised will only
normalise their privileges.

The Brahmanic dominant caste individuals who occupy the positions of
directors, managers, officers and coordinators in the development sector
have recently been criticised by the development workers belonging to the
marginalised communities. Their criticism was that, those Brahmanic
dominant caste people employed in the development sector actually work
against the development of marginalised communities. Mahendra, a
development worker, pointed out this fact in his email to
<http://wp.me/aYH2h-ti>[email protected], on 26th March 2015, in reply to
an article titled, "Does ActionAid International Support Caste
Discrimination?"

*"it is known fact that large majority of dominant caste who couldn't find
jobs in Government Sector, moved strategically to the development sector,
saying they are working for the poor and marginalized. Actually, they
wanted to control the funds and delay the process of development. It is
only few individuals from the dominant caste have really given up their
caste prejudices and worked for poor. As long as they continue to practice
the Brahmanical rituals, they will continue to discriminate the SC/STs, the
trend now among the dalit groups and Christian-background support agencies
is appointing Brahmanical candidates as their CEOs/ top positions, so they
also don't want backward and Dalit Christians to head NGOs. Sorry state of
affairs in the name of development of SC/STs"12.*

*An attempt to understand the social diversity in 34 organisations*

The managements and the people associated with developmental organisations
are always ready to lecture about transparency and accountability
particularly in government, often referring to its poor functioning and
corruption. Nevertheless, when we look at the development organisations
themselves, we hardly see them maintain those values of transparency and
accountability in their own institutional spaces.

A small study of 34 development agencies, through the Right to Information
Act 2005, was conducted, but no valuable data on the social diversity
within their organisational structures was made available. They were
practically evasive. As a lawyer, I was well aware of the fact that
technically they do not come under the definition of "Public Authority"
according to the RTI Act. However, my intention was to check their moral
and ethical commitment towards the ideals of transparency and
accountability. Moreover, every legal right was initially an ethical and
moral value. By including those values in the legislations, we add legal
status to them. In addition, the value of transparency in public life need
not necessarily be a technical requirement imposed by the RTI Act. That
these NGOs, *technically*, did not fall under the purview of the RTI Act
doesn't mean that they need not follow norms of transparency. They are
ethically and morally more accountable to the people than the Government.
It is interesting to note that some of these NGOs were involved in the
campaign to strengthen the RTI Act itself. That they preach an ethical
value that they themselves do not practice in their backyard cancels their
commitment to the cause itself.

[image: ngo rti 1]

[image: ngo rti 2a]

[image: ngo rti 3a]

The above table reveals two things; one, the development organisations are
not ready to share the information on the social diversity of their staff.
Two, they fear, it seems, that it will reveal their poor record in
implementing social diversity policies.

Of the 34 organisations, only 10 have replied and of the ten only two- *PRIA
(Participatory Research in Asia)* and *National Foundation of India *- have
provided the information. Nevertheless, that information was insufficient.
PRIA provided only the list of their employees, their gender and state of
domicile, but not caste status of their employees. The N*ational Foundation
of India has provided only a two-line reply, which said that "in
professional staff one female and in support staff, two males
underrepresented."* Still, there was no mention of caste status of their
staff.

*Save the Children - BAL Raksha Bharath* <http://wp.me/aYH2h-tj>, which
claims *"To inspire breakthroughs in the way the world treats children, and
to achieve immediate and lasting change in their lives"23*. replied saying
that *"[W]e have a policy of inclusion and equal opportunity policy for our
employees, as a policy, we do not ask our employees about their caste,
religion or ethnicity at the time of recruitment"24*. This is a
self-contradictory statement. Without recognizing the social identity of
staff, how can you pretend to follow an 'inclusive policy'? How do you
think some people need the benefit of equal opportunity if you cannot
identify the forms of discrimination? They have an inclusion and equal
opportunity policy in place, but they never ask the caste, religion or
ethnicity at the time of recruitment. Then, on what basis does their
inclusion policy work, when the caste, ethnicity and religion themselves
form the basis of social exclusion and marginalisation? Equal opportunity
and inclusion - all tall and high-sounding principles, but they will
forever remain in the realm of the abstract without ever transforming into
concrete actions.

[image: rti ngos]

*Aid at Action* says that caste is an item of personal information, which
cannot be shared with other people. How can caste be a personal thing? It
is also contrary to their own understanding that the personal is political.
If it is 'personal', why do people from the Brahmanic dominant castes
flaunt the caste-titles in their surnames in public? Verma, Sharma,
Shastri, Pundit, Reddi, Naidu, Patel, Thakur - there are so many such caste
tails in India. They are okay with disclosing their own caste in the public
because it is a privilege, but they will not disclose the caste-wise data
of their staff, even if it was asked for the purpose of a study on social
diversity. Some organisations like *ActionAid India* preach to others that
"personal is political, because personal affects political and political
affects personal" in the context of their feminist approach to the problems
of women. If that is so, there should not have been anything to hide.

58% of the ActionAid India staff are from Brahmanical dominant castes
<http://wp.me/aYH2h-tv>25, who constitute only 18% of the entire Indian
population, as furnished to the VODI - *Voice of Dalits International*.
Still, some people on social media argue that, *"It just shows that more
people from Brahmanic dominant castes are interested in working for the
development of marginalised communities."* Is that so? If they are
interested in the development of marginalised communities, why can't they
work voluntarily by giving up their privileges and huge salaries?

Despite the fact that the international aid agencies have been working for
the upliftment of the marginalised communities in India since decades,
there is no visible or substantial change in their lives. Those
communities, particularly the SCs and STs, continue to be in the lower
strata of society. One reason that led to this failure was these agencies'
inability to understand the social, political and cultural dynamics of the
Indian caste system. Without proper understanding of the caste system, one
cannot comprehend the resultant systematic exclusion which, in fact, led to
the perennial poverty of those communities. The aid agency's institutional
setup itself is "caste-blind" because they peopled it with Brahmins and
Brahmanic dominant caste individuals. Any developmental intervention for
the marginalised communities without their active participation will be a
charade in the name of charity.

As Ambedkar observed, the idea of charity in India itself is caste-ridden: *"Go
into the field of charity. With one or two exceptions, all charity in India
is communal. If a Parsi dies, he leaves his money for Parsis. If a Jain
dies, he leaves his money for Jains. If a Marwadi dies, he leaves his money
for Marwadis. If a Brahmin dies, he leaves his money for Brahmins. Thus,
there is no room for the downtrodden and the *outcastes* in politics, in
industry, in commerce, and in education"*26. Now the international charity
organisations that set up their offices in India continue the same old idea
of charity through which their own kith and kin benefit; not the
downtrodden people of India

The lack of access to resources and opportunities for the underprivileged
castes and classes in the NGO sector is the result of deep-rooted
prejudices, which the powerful privileged castes carry along with
themselves. The more they claim to adhere to the values of equal
opportunity and inclusion in the language of modernity, the less is the
possibility of them identifying and overcoming their own biases. Civil
society was always seen as the theatre of all forms of power politics, as
per Gramscian understanding. But the term is now colonised by NGOs who
claim to represent all the progressive values but, in fact, they have been
reinforcing all the hegemonic values that suppress the marginalized.
Historically, the movements of the underprivileged have generated many
democratic values, but in practice the NGOs appropriate them; where do they
deploy them and to what end should have been important concerns of public
life.

~

*Notes*

[1]. Gramsci, 1971 p.234, available at-
http://marxisttheory.org/antonio-gramsci-theories-of-hegemony-civil-society-and-revolution/#note-635-11

[2]. Ambedkar, 'Thus Spoke Ambedkar', *Quotations of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar*,
available at - http://www.ambedkar.org/Babasaheb/quotations.htm, viewed on
16th April 2015

[3]. The three Round Table Conferences of 1930-32 were a series of
conferences organized by the British Government to discuss constitutional
reforms in India.

[4]. Ambedkar, *What Congress and Gandhi have done to the untouchables*,
Chapter IV, A False Claim, available at -

http://www.ambedkar.org/ambcd/41G.What%20Congress%20and%20Gandhi%20CHAPTER%20VI.htm
viewed on 17th April 2015

[5]. The Poona Pact refers to an agreement between Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar
and Mahatma Gandhi signed on 24 September 1932 at Yerwada Central Jail in
Pune (now in Maharashtra), India. It was signed by Pt Madan Mohan Malviya,
some Hindu leaders, Dr BR Ambedkar, and some Dalit leaders to break the
fast unto death undertaken by Gandhi in Yerwada jail to annul Macdonald
Award giving separate electorate to Dalits for electing members of state
legislative assemblies in British India.

[6]. Reservation in India is the process of setting aside a certain
percentage of seats (vacancies) in government institutions for members of
backward and under-represented communities (defined primarily by caste and
tribe). Reservation is a form of quota-based affirmative action.
Reservation is governed by constitutional laws, statutory laws, and local
rules and regulations.

[7]. The term Brahmanic is used here for the jatis that believe in
Brahmanic caste system as an ideology and practice prejudices against
unprivileged communities; they are the non-Brahmin landed communities who
lead the Brahmanic way of life. They are Kammas, Reddis, Velamas, Rajus and
Kapus in the Telugu states, Marathas and Kunbis in Maharashtra. The
Vellalar jatis, Thevars and Nadars in Tamil Nadu. Vokkaligas, Lingayats and
Reddis in Karnataka. Patels in Gujarat, Jats, Rajputs, Bhumihars, Khatris,
Kayasths, Yadavs and Kurmis etc in the various northern states. Baidyas,
Kayasths in West Bengal; Karanas in Odisha etc.

[8]. "Brahmins in India", *Outlook India*, June 4, 2007,
http://www.outlookindia.com/article/brahmins-in-india/234783

[9]. 'Upper castes dominate national media, says survey in Delhi', *The
Hindu,*
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/upper-castes-dominate-national-media-says-survey-in-delhi/article3115113.ece

[10]. *Problems of Dalits in India*, published at-
http://indiacurrentaffairs.org/problems-of-dalits-in-india/, available at-
https://karthiknavayan.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/problems-of-dalits-in-india.pdf.
p.2

[11]. 'Dalit Reality', *People's Democracy*, Chennai edition published on
April 6-12, 2015

[12]. Mahendra's reply to the article, *Does ActionAid International
Support Caste Discrimination*, email dated 26th March 2015, available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1816

[13]. The Right to Information Act (RTI) is an Act of the Parliament of
India "to provide for setting out the practical regime of right to
information for citizens" passed by Parliament on 15 June 2005 and came
fully into force on 12 October 2005.

[14]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1826

[15]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1821

[16]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1822

[17]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1823

[18]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1824

[19]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1825

[20]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/?attachment_id=1827

[21]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/gmail-application-for-information-under-section-61-of-the-right-to-information-act-2005.pdf

[22]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/gmail-application-for-information-under-section-61-of-the-right-to-information-act-2005-aa-india.pdf

[23]. *Save The Children*'s Mission Statement, available at -
https://www.savethechildren.in/about-us/mission-and-vision-child-ngo.html

[24]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/gmail-letter-to-save-the-children-india.pdf

[25]. Available at -
https://karthiknavayan.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/untitled.png

[26]. Ambedkar B R, "Prospects of Democracy in India", *Voice of America*,
20th May 1956, available at -
http://old.bamcef.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=154:prospects-of-democracy-in-india-babasaheb-dr-b-r-ambedkar&catid=10:news&Itemid=13

~~~



*Karthik Navayan is a human rights activist.*

*Cartoons by Unnamati Syama Sundar.*

-- 
B.Karthik Navayan,
http://karthiknavayan.wordpress.com/

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