Tribal Community Rights in Natural Resource–Driven Sustainable Development

Authors

  • Godage Dattatray Sitaram

Abstract

Tribal communities across the world have historically shared a symbiotic relationship with forests, water bodies, land, and biodiversity. Their survival, cultural identity, and economic stability are deeply rooted in natural resources. In recent decades, however, rapid industrialization, resource extraction, and neoliberal development models have threatened this delicate balance. This research paper critically analyses the intersection of tribal community rights and natural resource–driven sustainable development. It explores how indigenous knowledge systems, community-based natural resource management, and legal frameworks such as the Forest Rights Act (FRA), Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA), and various international conventions protect or fail to protect tribal rights. Drawing upon case studies from India—including the Dongria Kondh, Bhil, and Santhal communities—the paper evaluates existing challenges: displacement, loss of livelihood, inadequate recognition of land rights, and limited participation in decision-making. It argues that sustainable development must incorporate tribal epistemologies, prioritize ecological justice, and adopt bottom-up policy structures. The study concludes that tribal rights are not obstacles to development; rather, they are essential catalysts for ensuring environmental sustainability, social equity, and cultural preservation.

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Published

2025-01-30