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UNDP Report on FRA Implementation

UNDP Report on FRA Implementation

Source: The Hindu
GS II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation


Overview

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  1. News in Brief
  2. Key Findings
  3. Key Recommendations
  4. Forest Rights Act

Why in the News?

The UNDP report Securing Rights, Enabling Futures – Policy Lessons from FRA and Future Pathways reviewed nearly 20 years of Forest Rights Act (FRA) implementation.

News in Brief

  • A United Nations report released this month on the progress of the Forest Rights Act in India has suggested that there may be a need to build consensus for a sunset clause.
  • Provides an end date for the recognition and vesting of rights under the law to Scheduled Tribes and other forest-dwellers.
  • The report has also recommended a slew of measures for post-recognition management and governance.
Key Findings

  • Persistent Gaps
    • Uptake gaps, under-implementation due to historical conflicts, weak policy execution, and jurisdictional issues.
    • Several FRA titles are missing in Chhattisgarh records (record-keeping errors).
  • Sunset Clause Proposal
    • States like Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Maharashtra favour an “end date” for recognition and vesting of rights.
    • Gram Sabhas recommended to decide when claims saturation is reached.
  • Incorrect Recognition
    • Some FRA titles were incorrectly recognised due to weak record-keeping, and lack of proper verification.
  • Institutional Challenges
    • Conflicts between Tribal Welfare Departments vs Forest Departments.
    • Unclear stage for integration of Gram Sabha Forest Management Plans with official Working Plans.
Key Recommendations

  • Strengthening Post-Recognition Governance
    • Establish inter-departmental committees to resolve conflicts.
    • Accurate and centralised record-keeping of FRA holders.
  • Gender Equity
    • Disaggregate FRA data gender-wise.
    • Ensure women’s leadership in designing Community Forest Resource (CFR) management plans.
    • Link FRA with NRLM, emphasising gender-sensitive livelihood avenues.
  • Mainstreaming Forest Rights
    • Recognise FRA right-holders as a category in all welfare and livelihood schemes.
    • Formulate a National Tribal Policy (5-year horizon).
    • Use Article 275(1) for financial support to integrate FRA + PESA for stronger tribal self-governance.
  • Sustaining Growth
    • Mission-mode schemes like PM-JANMAN and DAJGUA praised, but long-term programmes needed for durable outcomes.
  • Unutilised Provisions
    • Section 3(1)(k), FRA: Community rights over biodiversity, IP, and traditional knowledge – no claims yet, potential for monetisation.
  • Minor Forest Produce (MFP)
    • Clarify ownership, harvesting, transit, and sale norms.
Forest Rights Act
  • Forest Rights Act, 2006 (Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act).
  • Purpose
    • To recognise and vest rights to use forests and forest resources in the Scheduled Tribes and other communities that have traditionally been dependent on forests for their livelihoods.
  • FRA prevents eviction of forest dwellers without rehabilitation and settlement.
  • Gram Sabha (village assembly) initiates, verifies, and decides claims for rights, supported by sub-divisional and district-level committees.
  • Titles have been distributed over 2.32 crore acres of forest land, of which 1.88 crore acres are covered under various community rights titles.

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