Scheduled Caste

Scheduled Castes are those castes, communities, or groups that are specified in the Presidential notification issued under Article 341 of the Constitution. The term is a constitutional and legal category, not merely a social description. A community is treated as a Scheduled Caste only when it is included in the list notified for a particular State or Union Territory.

Historical background

The idea behind the Scheduled Caste category is rooted in the long history of untouchability, social exclusion, caste-based oppression, and denial of access to education, land, temples, public spaces, and occupations. During the colonial period, such communities were often referred to as Depressed Classes. After independence, the Constitution adopted the expression Scheduled Castes and provided them with legal recognition and protective safeguards.

Constitutional basis

The constitutional foundation of Scheduled Castes is found mainly in:

• Article 341 – Identification of Scheduled Castes
Article 14 – Equality before law
• Article 15(4) – Special provisions for advancement of socially and educationally backward classes, Scheduled Castes, and Scheduled Tribes
• Article 15(5) – Reservation in educational institutions
• Article 16(4) – Reservation in public employment
• Article 16(4A) – Reservation in promotion in certain cases
Article 17 – Abolition of untouchability
• Article 46 – Promotion of educational and economic interests of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
• Article 330 – Reservation of seats in Lok Sabha
• Article 332 – Reservation of seats in State Legislative Assemblies
• Article 335 – Claims of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes to services and posts
• Article 338 – National Commission for Scheduled Castes

How Scheduled Castes are identified

Article 341 provides the constitutional mechanism.

Article 341(1)

The President specifies, by public notification, which castes, races, tribes, or parts or groups within them shall be treated as Scheduled Castes for the purposes of the Constitution. In the case of a State, this is done after consultation with the Governor.

Article 341(2)

After the notification is issued, Parliament alone can include or exclude any group from that list by law.

This means:

• Scheduled Caste status comes from constitutional notification
• The list is State-specific
• State governments cannot alter the list on their own
• Courts cannot add communities to the list

State-specific nature

A very important feature of Scheduled Caste status is that it is linked to a particular State or Union Territory. A caste recognized as Scheduled Caste in one State may not automatically be recognized as Scheduled Caste in another State. This is because the history and intensity of caste discrimination differ across regions.

Main constitutional safeguards

Equality and non-discrimination

The Constitution seeks to remove the social disabilities historically imposed on Scheduled Castes through equality provisions and anti-discrimination measures.

Abolition of untouchability

Article 17 abolishes untouchability and forbids its practice in any form. This is one of the strongest constitutional protections for Scheduled Castes.

Reservation

Scheduled Castes are given reservation in:

• Educational institutions
• Public employment
• Lok Sabha
• State Legislative Assemblies

Welfare and advancement

The Constitution directs the State to promote the educational and economic interests of Scheduled Castes and to protect them from social injustice and exploitation.

Important laws related to Scheduled Castes

Protection of Civil Rights Act 1955

This Act gives effect to Article 17 and penalizes the practice of untouchability.

Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989

This is one of the most important protective laws. It was enacted to prevent atrocities, humiliation, violence, dispossession, and caste-based abuse against Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.

Important features:

• Defines specific atrocities
• Provides for special courts
• Provides relief and rehabilitation
• Strengthened through later amendments

Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order 1950

This Presidential Order is the primary legal instrument listing Scheduled Castes under Article 341.

Reservation and representation

Scheduled Castes receive reservation as a form of protective discrimination meant to correct historical injustice and ensure real equality.

Areas of reservation include:

• Educational admissions
• Government jobs
• Elected representative institutions

Political reservation is provided under Article 330 and Article 332.

National Commission for Scheduled Castes

Article 338 provides for the National Commission for Scheduled Castes.

Its functions include:

• Investigating safeguards for Scheduled Castes
• Monitoring implementation of constitutional and legal protections
• Inquiring into complaints
• Advising on socio-economic development measures
• Reporting to the President

Major constitutional amendments and developments

65th Constitutional Amendment Act 1990

It strengthened the commission system relating to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.

89th Constitutional Amendment Act 2003

It bifurcated the earlier combined commission and created a separate National Commission for Scheduled Castes under Article 338 and National Commission for Scheduled Tribes under Article 338A.

Reservation-related amendments

Articles such as 16(4A) and related developments have shaped reservation in promotion and related service matters affecting Scheduled Castes.

Important case laws

State of Madras v Champakam Dorairajan

This early case led to the First Constitutional Amendment and indirectly shaped the constitutional basis for special provisions for disadvantaged groups, including Scheduled Castes.

State of Kerala v N M Thomas

The Supreme Court upheld the broader idea that equality permits affirmative action and not merely formal equal treatment.

Indra Sawhney v Union of India

Though primarily focused on OBC reservation, the case remains important for the general jurisprudence of reservation and equality. It clarified major principles of affirmative action.

State of Maharashtra v Milind

The Supreme Court held that courts cannot modify or expand the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes lists notified under Articles 341 and 342.

E V Chinnaiah v State of Andhra Pradesh

The Court held that the Presidential list of Scheduled Castes forms one constitutional class and State legislatures cannot alter it.

State of Punjab v Davinder Singh

The Court revisited the issue of sub-classification and held that equitable distribution of reservation benefits among Scheduled Castes may be constitutionally permissible, so long as the Presidential list itself is not altered.

Safai Karamchari Andolan v Union of India

The Supreme Court strongly addressed manual scavenging and the continuing indignity faced by historically oppressed communities, linking the issue to constitutional morality and dignity.

Social realities and issues

Despite constitutional safeguards, Scheduled Castes continue to face multiple structural problems.

Major issues include:

• Caste-based violence
• Untouchability in disguised forms
• Educational exclusion
• Landlessness
• Employment discrimination
• Poor access to justice
• Manual scavenging and sanitation-based caste labour
• Social segregation in villages and towns

Why Scheduled Castes matter in constitutional law

The Scheduled Caste category is central to Indian constitutionalism because it reflects the Constitution’s attempt to move from formal equality to substantive equality. The Constitution does not merely prohibit discrimination. It also recognizes that historically oppressed communities need special legal protection, political representation, and socio-economic support.

Difference between Scheduled Caste and Other Backward Classes

Scheduled Castes are constitutionally identified under Article 341 and are historically linked with untouchability and severe caste oppression. Other Backward Classes are identified primarily through social and educational backwardness and are not the same constitutional category.

Difference between Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe

Scheduled Castes are mainly linked with caste-based exclusion and untouchability. Scheduled Tribes are identified under Article 342 and are generally associated with tribal isolation, distinctive culture, and geographic and social marginalization.

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