Tribal Development and Security
Tribal regions often overlap with Left Wing Extremism (LWE)-affected areas, where underdevelopment, displacement, and governance gaps have fuelled alienation and insurgency. A development-led security approach is central to stabilising these regions.
Addressing Displacement and Alienation
- Land and Resource Conflicts: Mining, dams, and infrastructure projects have led to displacement without adequate rehabilitation, creating distrust toward the state.
- Weak implementation of the Forest Rights Act, 2006 has aggravated grievances.
- Loss of Livelihood and Identity: Disruption of forest-based economies undermines traditional livelihoods.
- Cultural alienation fosters support for extremist narratives.
- Governance Deficits: Limited access to healthcare, education, and administration leads to state absence perception.
Already a Member? Login here Do You Want to Read More?
Subscribe Now
To get access to detailed content
Take Annual Subscription and get the following Advantage
The annual members of the Civil Services Chronicle can read the monthly content of the magazine as well as the Chronicle magazine archives.
Readers can study all the material since 2018 of the Civil Services Chronicle monthly issue in the form of Chronicle magazine archives.
Security
- 1 Neighbourhood First Policy and Security
- 2 Development as a Security Strategy
- 3 Proxy Wars and External Sponsorship
- 4 UAVs Threat: Attacks on Military Installations
- 5 Dark Web and Cybercrime Networks
- 6 Two-Front War Challenge for India
- 7 Ransomware as a Security Threat
- 8 India’s Digital Sovereignty
- 9 Data Colonization as a National Security Challenge
- 10 Cyber Attacks on Critical Infrastructure

