Monday, 16 March 2026

A Theoretical Reappraisal of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Kanshi Ram in the Evolution of Dalit Politics

 

A Theoretical Reappraisal of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Kanshi Ram in the Evolution of Dalit Politics

SR Darapuri, National President, All India Peoples Front 


 


Introduction

The intellectual and political trajectory of Dalit politics in modern India is marked by two paradigmatic moments: the republican constitutionalism of B. R. Ambedkar and the Bahujan majoritarian mobilization of Kanshi Ram. While both figures aimed at the emancipation of historically oppressed communities, their theoretical premises, strategic orientations, and conceptions of democracy differed in crucial respects.

Ambedkar developed a normative theory of democracy grounded in constitutional morality, minority safeguards, and social transformation. Kanshi Ram, operating in a later historical conjuncture, articulated a strategy of demographic consolidation and electoral capture through the formation of the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP).

This essay offers a theoretically dense comparison of these two paradigms by situating them within broader debates in democratic theory, minority rights, republicanism, and identity politics. It argues that Ambedkar represents a model of normative republican constitutionalism, whereas Kanshi Ram embodies a form of instrumental majoritarian democratic mobilization. Both have shaped Dalit politics in distinct yet intersecting ways.

I. Ambedkar’s Republican Constitutionalism

1. Democracy as Social Morality

Ambedkar’s understanding of democracy transcended proceduralism. In his Constituent Assembly speeches and earlier writings such as Annihilation of Caste (1936), he defined democracy as a mode of associated living premised on liberty, equality, and fraternity. Drawing implicitly on European republicanism and American constitutionalism, Ambedkar argued that political democracy must rest upon social democracy.

This view aligns with the republican tradition in political theory, particularly the idea that freedom is not merely non-interference but non-domination (Pettit, 1997). In caste society, Dalits were structurally dominated, rendering formal political equality insufficient. Hence, Ambedkar’s insistence on: Fundamental rights, Affirmative action independent judiciary and Federal safeguards.

Democracy, for Ambedkar, required institutional design capable of preventing majority tyranny in a hierarchical society.

2. Minority Safeguards and the Problem of Majoritarianism

Ambedkar’s advocacy of separate electorates for Depressed Classes during the Round Table Conferences must be understood as a theory of minority self-representation. His fear was that in a Hindu-majority polity structured by caste prejudice, Dalits would be permanently subordinated.

The Poona Pact (1932), forced compromise notwithstanding, reinforced his conviction that majority rule without safeguards could become oppressive. This anticipates modern multicultural theorists like Will Kymlicka, who argue that minority rights are compatible with liberal democracy.

Ambedkar thus reconceptualized democracy as counter-majoritarian constitutionalism. Unlike classical majoritarian democracy, his model was protective rather than aggregative.

3. Social Democracy and Economic Justice

Ambedkar’s republicanism also incorporated elements of social democracy. His proposals for state socialism in “States and Minorities” (1947) included nationalization of key industries and land redistribution. Though not fully realized, these ideas reveal his commitment to economic restructuring.

Thus, Ambedkar’s project was: Anti-caste, Anti-majoritarian Social democratic and institutionally constitutional.

His formation of the Republican Party of India (RPI) in 1956 signified an attempt to create a broad-based republican alternative, transcending sectarian caste politics.

II. Kanshi Ram’s Bahujan Majoritarianism

1. Historical Context: Post-Congress Fragmentation

Kanshi Ram emerged in the late 20th century when: Congress dominance declined, Caste-based mobilization intensified and Mandal Commission politics reshaped representation.

In this milieu, the question was no longer minority protection within a dominant-party system but electoral competitiveness within a fragmented polity.

2. From Minority to Majority

Kanshi Ram’s core innovation was conceptual. He reframed Dalits as part of the “Bahujan” — the majority composed of SCs, STs, OBCs, and religious minorities. This was less a sociological fact than a political strategy.

His thesis was arithmetic: oppressed communities together outnumber upper castes; their fragmentation prevents political power. Therefore, unity is prerequisite to rule.

Unlike Ambedkar’s minority-centric constitutionalism, Kanshi Ram embraced majoritarianism — but a counter-elite majoritarianism. It sought to invert, not abolish, majority rule.

3. Political Power as “Master Key”

Kanshi Ram famously described political power as the “master key.” The implication was that social reform, economic redistribution, and symbolic dignity require control of the state.

This instrumental view resonates with Schumpeterian competitive democracy: politics as struggle for power rather than ethical deliberation. Whereas Ambedkar theorized democracy as moral community, Kanshi Ram operationalized it as electoral contest.

4. Organizational Rationality

Kanshi Ram’s creation of BAMCEF, DS-4, and ultimately BSP reveals Weberian rational-legal organization. The BSP functioned as a disciplined cadre party, capable of booth-level mobilization and strategic alliance formation.

Under Mayawati, the BSP achieved majority government in Uttar Pradesh in 2007, demonstrating the effectiveness of Bahujan social engineering.

III. Comparative Democratic Theory

1. Normative vs Instrumental Democracy

Ambedkar: Democracy as moral ideal, Institutional safeguards against domination and Fraternity as ethical foundation.

Kanshi Ram: Democracy as arithmetic aggregation, Electoral mobilization, and Power as precondition for justice.

Ambedkar’s framework aligns with deliberative and republican democratic theory. Kanshi Ram’s aligns with competitive, mobilizational democracy.

2. Minority Constitutionalism vs Counter-Elite Majoritarianism

Ambedkar feared tyranny of the majority; Kanshi Ram sought to create a new majority.

The tension reflects two solutions to caste hierarchy: Protective constitutionalism and Transformative demographic mobilization.

Ambedkar sought to constrain power; Kanshi Ram sought to capture it.

3. Identity Politics and Strategic Essentialism

Ambedkar treated caste identity as a problem to be annihilated. His ultimate act of conversion to Buddhism symbolized transcendence of caste Hindu order.

Kanshi Ram treated caste identity as a strategic resource. His mobilization of Dalit consciousness did not aim at immediate annihilation but at empowerment through consolidation.

This corresponds to what Gayatri Spivak terms “strategic essentialism”: temporary consolidation of identity for political ends.

IV. Impact on Dalit Politics

1. Ambedkar’s Long-Term Structural Impact

Constitutional reservation system, Legal abolition of untouchability, Intellectual canon of anti-caste thought and Institutionalization of rights discourse.

Ambedkar created normative infrastructure.

2. Kanshi Ram’s Transformative Electoral Impact

Independent Dalit-led governments, Assertion in public symbolism and memorial architecture,  Creation of Dalit political bureaucracy networks and  Psychological shift from marginality to rule.

Kanshi Ram converted identity into electoral sovereignty.

V. Limits and Contradictions

Ambedkar’s RPI fragmented after his death, revealing limits of normatively driven politics without robust organization.

Kanshi Ram’s Bahujan coalition faced internal contradictions among SCs, OBCs, and minorities. Over time, the BSP’s social engineering diluted core Bahujan rhetoric.

Both models encounter structural constraints:

Persistence of caste hierarchy, Majoritarian nationalism, and Neoliberal economic transformations

VI. Toward a Synthetic Framework

A theoretically robust Dalit democratic project today may require synthesis:

Ambedkar’s constitutional morality and minority safeguards, Kanshi Ram’s organizational discipline and mass mobilization, Intersectional expansion beyond caste arithmetic and deepening of internal party democracy

Republicanism without mobilization risks irrelevance. Majoritarian mobilization without normative anchor risks instrumentalism.

Conclusion

Ambedkar and Kanshi Ram represent two distinct yet interconnected paradigms of Dalit politics.

Ambedkar theorized democracy as ethical, constitutional, and counter-majoritarian. Kanshi Ram operationalized democracy as strategic, majoritarian, and power-oriented.

Ambedkar provided the moral grammar of Dalit emancipation; Kanshi Ram supplied its electoral syntax.

The future of Dalit politics depends on reconciling these traditions — embedding Bahujan mobilization within a robust framework of republican constitutionalism and social democracy.

Sunday, 15 March 2026

Caste and the Digital Economy in India : Inequality, Power, and the Ambedkarite Challenge

 

Caste and the Digital Economy in India : Inequality, Power, and the Ambedkarite Challenge

SR Darapuri, National President, All India Peoples Front 

             

Abstract

Over the past decade, India has witnessed a rapid expansion of digital technologies. Digital governance, digital finance, e-commerce, artificial intelligence, and platform-based labour markets have significantly transformed India’s economy and society. Policymakers often present the digital economy as a tool for development, transparency, and inclusion. However, Indian society has historically been structured by caste-based inequalities. In this context, an important question arises: does the digital revolution reduce these inequalities, or does it reproduce them in new forms?

This research article examines the relationship between caste and the digital economy in India. Drawing on Ambedkarite political economy, it argues that digital technologies are not independent of social structures. When implemented within a deeply caste-stratified society, they tend to reproduce existing inequalities unless consciously designed to counter them. The article analyses three key dimensions: (1) the caste-based digital divide, (2) caste structures within digital labour markets, and (3) Dalit resistance and new possibilities within the digital public sphere. The article concludes by arguing that an Ambedkarite perspective is essential for ensuring that digital transformation in India advances social justice and democratic values.

1. Introduction

Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, digital technologies have increasingly shaped economic and social life around the world. The internet, mobile phones, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence have transformed multiple sectors of modern economies. India has also experienced an unprecedented expansion of digital technologies.

The Indian government has embraced digital transformation as a central development strategy. Digital governance systems, biometric identification, online payment platforms, and e-governance initiatives are presented as tools for improving administrative efficiency and accelerating economic growth. Advocates of digitalisation argue that digital technologies reduce corruption, enhance transparency, and empower citizens.

However, this optimistic narrative often overlooks critical social realities. Access to resources and opportunities in India is not equally distributed. Caste, class, gender, and regional disparities continue to influence social and economic outcomes.

Therefore, digital transformation cannot be understood purely as a technological phenomenon. It must be examined within the broader context of social structures and power relations.

This research article explores how caste shapes the emerging digital economy in India.

2. Theoretical Framework: Caste, Technology, and Political Economy

Understanding the relationship between technology and society requires recognising that technologies are not socially neutral. Technological systems are shaped by economic interests, political decisions, and institutional structures.

In the Indian context, caste is one of the most enduring social institutions. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar described caste as a system of graded inequality in which different social groups occupy hierarchical positions with unequal rights and opportunities.

Ambedkar argued that democracy cannot survive unless social and economic inequalities are addressed. Political democracy alone is insufficient if social hierarchies continue to dominate everyday life.

Applying this insight to digitalisation suggests that digital technologies will inevitably reflect the social structures within which they operate. If access to education, capital, and networks is unequally distributed, digital technologies may reproduce the same inequalities.

Thus, analysing digitalisation requires a political economy perspective that situates technological change within broader social relations.

3. The Rise of the Digital Economy

India’s digital economy now spans multiple sectors, including: Digital payment systems, E-commerce, Online education, Digital healthcare, Platform-based employment and Artificial intelligence and data analytics.

These technologies have accelerated economic activity and connected markets more efficiently. Small businesses can access online platforms, and consumers can obtain services through mobile devices.

However, the benefits of digital transformation are not evenly distributed across society.

4. The Caste-Based Digital Divide

Participation in the digital economy requires access to three essential resources: Digital devices, Internet connectivity, and Digital skills.

In India, access to these resources remains highly unequal.

Dalit and Adivasi communities often have limited access to smartphones, computers, and stable internet connections. Rural regions frequently suffer from weak digital infrastructure. Additionally, digital literacy remains low among many marginalised communities.

These disparities are rooted not only in economic poverty but also in historical exclusion. For generations, caste-based discrimination restricted access to education and economic opportunities for Dalits. As a result, many communities entered the digital age with significant structural disadvantages.

Thus, the digital divide is not merely a technological issue—it is fundamentally a question of social justice.

5. Digital Governance and Social Exclusion

Digital technologies are increasingly used to administer welfare programmes and public services in India. Citizens must often rely on digital identification systems and online platforms to access government benefits.

While digital governance aims to improve efficiency and transparency, it can also create new forms of exclusion.

Technical failures in biometric authentication, poor internet connectivity, and errors in digital databases can prevent individuals from accessing welfare benefits. Such failures disproportionately affect poor and marginalised communities.

Because Dalits are more likely to depend on public welfare programmes due to historical economic marginalisation, they are particularly vulnerable to these technological barriers.

This raises serious concerns about accountability and democratic governance. Automated systems may reduce opportunities for citizens to challenge administrative decisions.

6. Caste and the Digital Labour Market

The digital economy has generated new forms of employment, particularly in information technology, start-up industries, and digital services.

However, access to these sectors often requires advanced education and specialised technical skills. Historically privileged groups have had greater access to elite educational institutions, allowing them to dominate high-skilled sectors of the digital economy.

In contrast, many workers from marginalised communities participate in the digital economy through low-paid platform work such as delivery services and ride-hailing platforms.

This emerging pattern resembles older occupational hierarchies structured by caste. While new economic sectors have emerged, structural inequalities continue to shape who performs which types of work.

7. Digital Capitalism and Social Power

A defining feature of the digital economy is the central role of data and algorithms. Large technology corporations collect vast quantities of data and use advanced algorithms to generate profits.

Control over data has become a new form of economic power. Corporations that manage digital platforms gain immense influence over markets and consumer behaviour.

If datasets reflect social biases, algorithms may reproduce these biases. For example, automated systems used in hiring, lending, or policing may unintentionally replicate existing forms of discrimination.

Thus, digital technologies can encode social inequalities into automated systems.

8. The Digital Public Sphere and Dalit Resistance

Despite these challenges, digital technologies have also created new opportunities for Dalit political mobilisation.

Social media platforms allow Dalit intellectuals, writers, and activists to disseminate ideas, share experiences of discrimination, and build networks of solidarity. Online platforms enable marginalised communities to bypass traditional media institutions that historically excluded them.

Digital spaces have played an important role in promoting Dalit literature, spreading Ambedkarite thought, and documenting caste-based violence.

In this sense, the digital public sphere has become a new arena of ideological contestation where both dominance and resistance coexist.

9. An Ambedkarite Approach to Digital Justice

An Ambedkarite framework for the digital economy would emphasise equality, democratic accountability, and social justice.

Several policy priorities emerge from this perspective:

1. Universal digital infrastructure
Governments must ensure affordable internet access and digital services for all citizens.

2. Expansion of digital education
Special digital literacy programmes should target marginalised communities.

3. Protection of labour rights
Workers in platform-based industries should receive legal protections and social security.

4. Democratic governance of data
Citizen data should be treated as a public resource subject to democratic oversight.

5. Algorithmic transparency
Digital systems must operate with transparency and accountability to prevent discrimination.

10. Conclusion

India’s digital revolution represents one of the most significant transformations in the country’s modern history. However, this transformation is unfolding within a society still shaped by deep social inequalities.

If digital technologies are implemented without addressing these inequalities, they may reinforce existing patterns of exclusion.

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar emphasised that democracy must extend beyond political institutions to encompass social and economic life. Therefore, India’s digital transformation must also reflect the principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity.

Digital technologies can become truly transformative only when they empower the most marginalised members of society.

A Theoretical Reappraisal of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Kanshi Ram in the Evolution of Dalit Politics

  A Theoretical Reappraisal of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Kanshi Ram in the Evolution of Dalit Politics SR Darapuri, National President, All...