GS 2: GovernanceGS 3: Internal Security

To build roads is to build peace, Pg9

Road construction in Maoist-hit areas improves governance, access, and security, countering insurgent influence by establishing state presence and rule of law.

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Key Highlights:

  • Road construction in India's tribal areas affected by Maoist insurgency is crucial for establishing state presence and governance.
  • Research indicates that road development in conflict zones improves electricity access, employment, and security.
  • Extralegal outfits and insurgents often fill governance gaps by providing services and justice systems.
  • Infrastructure development, accompanied by institutional safeguards, is essential for establishing lawful authority and integrating these regions.

Detailed Insights:

  • The absence of formal institutions in tribal hinterlands allows insurgent groups to establish parallel systems, such as informal courts and taxation, mimicking state functions.
  • Naxalite presence sometimes includes health services and welfare activities, which are strategic efforts to gain legitimacy rather than charitable acts.
  • Informal justice systems often lack constitutional safeguards, leading to arbitrary and punitive measures, including kangaroo courts and executions.
  • Infrastructure development correlates with a decline in crime and increased service access, making it a political tool for establishing state authority.
  • Integrating schools, police stations, clinics, and courts through road development brings services and a system accountable to citizens, promoting the rule of law.
  • Development efforts must focus on integrating pluralistic, rights-based governance rooted in India’s constitutional values, alongside infrastructure.

Key Concepts Involved:

  • Maoist Insurgency: An ongoing conflict involving Maoist groups aiming to overthrow the government through protracted armed struggle.
  • Extralegal Governance: Systems of control and administration that operate outside the bounds of formal law and state institutions.
  • Rule of Law: A principle where all individuals and institutions are subject to and accountable to law that is fairly applied and enforced.
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