Model Answers
Q: Does regionalism essentially lead to decentralization of power? Substantiate your answer with relevant examples.
Question asked in UPSC Sociology 2021 Paper 2. Download our app for last 20 year question with model answers.
Model Answer:
Regionalism in India and its Impact on Power Decentralization
Regionalism denotes political articulation of territorially based identities (linguistic, cultural, economic) seeking greater recognition or autonomy. Decentralization of power refers to constitutionally structured dispersal of authority from the Centre to states and below. In India, regionalism has been a major driver of federal restructuring, but its relationship with decentralization is complex, not automatic.
1. How regionalism has promoted decentralization
• Linguistic reorganisation of states (States Reorganisation Act, 1956) – As Paul Brass shows, linguistic regionalism led to creation of states like Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, which brought administration closer to vernacular publics and deepened “territorial democracy”.
• Strengthening federalism – Myron Weiner argued that accommodating regional demands through state formation (e.g., Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, later Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Telangana) has integrated peripheral regions and improved representation of historically neglected areas, a functional decentralization of political power.
• Rise of regional parties – Rajni Kothari and later Yogendra Yadav note that parties like DMK, TDP, Akali Dal, BJD, TRS converted regional grievances into bargaining power within coalition politics, shifting India from one‑party dominance to a multi-centric federal political system.
• Sub‑regional and tribal regionalism – Demands of Jharkhand, Bodoland, Gorkhaland, and North‑Eastern autonomy compelled greater recognition of ethnic and sub‑regional diversities and fed into reforms like the 73rd and 74th Amendments, pushing power downwards to local bodies.
2. Limits and contradictions: when regionalism does not decentralize
• Elite capture of regions – Brass points out that regionalism is often mobilized by dominant elites. Once in power, these elites can centralize authority within the state (e.g., highly centralized leadership patterns in some Dravidian or North Indian parties), substituting central domination with regional domination.
• Centralised responses to regionalism – Secessionist or militant regionalism (Punjab’s Khalistan movement, Naga and Kashmiri movements) invited heavy central intervention, AFSPA, and President’s Rule, leading to re-centralization rather than decentralization.
• Fiscal and administrative centralisation – Economic regionalism (demands for special packages, backward-region status) can intensify vertical dependence on the Centre through grants, planning and regulatory controls, as noted by Rudolph and Rudolph in their analysis of “overdeveloped” central bureaucracy.
Thus, regionalism has often acted as a vehicle for democratizing and decentralizing Indian federalism, but its outcomes depend on state response and internal class power within regions.
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