Political Science, asked by 1234567895555, 11 months ago

how caste inequality can be ignored

Answers

Answered by lionxpvt
2
Acc. to me,
'The Caste Inequality'

This is a great threat to the development of any country (Specially India)

Due to this kind of discrimination based on community of a person many internal problems are been created within the country.

India's Constitution is the 1st Constitution which has granted 'Cast Discrimination' as a crime and has concluded fine as well as arrest for it.

*Your Answer*

Any type of cast inequality can be ignored if we just dont give a look towards the people who discrimination (criminals as per law). And if the threat is too big Kindly complain to the government authorities/ police station near by.

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Answered by rohitmaurya786
0

Answer:

Explanation:

For more than fifty years, studies of the caste system have tended to adopt an anthropological, mostly qualitative and monographic approach that privileges the religious and ritualized dimension of this particular social institution. The question of the caste-related social and economic inequalities, on the other hand, has remained a relatively overlooked topic in the sociology of India. The reason often alleged for this situation is the scarcity of available statistical data. To the extent that they no longer take into account the caste as a criteria, the ten-year censuses yield some information only on the large social groups legally recognized in the constitution. But this data remains insufficient for a fine-tuned sociological analysis. These questions are however debated on a daily basis, and Indian sociologists do not refrain from intervening in these fierce social and political debates –even though it is not always clear if they do so on the basis of social science or political commitment. Questions are raised in particular regarding the evolution of the lower castes, which benefit from affirmative action policies implemented since the colonial era but fully developed since the country’s independence. Did these castes fully benefit from these policies? Should such policies be continued, even though some sociologists and politicians warn that they might introduce a real discrimination against other groups? Using first hand statistical data that has been made available by recent methodological changes in some nationwide censuses, the author shows that the social distribution of class- or castrelated inequalities remains remarkably stable in India, whether in the public or in the private sector. This finding raises some questions as to the unarticulated prejudices of Indian sociology as a discipline, which ignores the quantitative study of the economic and social transformations of contemporary India.

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