Social Citizenship

Social Citizenship

Social Citizenship

(Relevant for Sociology Paper I: Politics and Society and Sociology Paper II: Politics and Society)

Introduction

Social citizenship is a crucial component of modern democratic societies, ensuring that every individual enjoys not only legal and political rights but also social rights such as access to education, healthcare, housing, and social security. Coined and conceptualized by British sociologist T.H. Marshall, the term represents a transformative evolution in how states relate to their citizens, especially in welfare democracies. In the Indian context, social citizenship is deeply intertwined with the constitutional promise of justice, equality, and dignity, and is of immense relevance in UPSC sociology and public policy debates—especially in light of current issues like rising inequality, social exclusion, and the demand for universal basic services.

Defining Social Citizenship

It refers to a form of citizenship in which the state ensures that all individuals have access to basic social rights—irrespective of their socio-economic status. These rights are essential for people to function as full members of society.

T.H. Marshall (1950) famously outlined three elements of citizenship:

  1. Civil rights – rights necessary for individual freedom (speech, property, justice),
  2. Political rights – the right to participate in political power (vote, contest elections),
  3. Social rights – the right to live a civilized life (education, welfare, healthcare).

While civil and political rights are crucial, Marshall argued that social rights make citizenship truly inclusive and participatory.

Evolution of Social Citizenship: A Historical Overview

  • Pre-modern societies were based on status, not citizenship.
  • Liberal revolutions (17th–18th centuries) emphasized civil and political rights.
  • Industrial capitalism and class inequalities gave rise to demands for social justice.
  • Post-War welfare states institutionalized social citizenship to reduce class-based exclusion.
  • In India, the post-independence period saw the state adopting Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSP) to embed social rights in governance.

Social Citizenship in India:

India provides a unique model of social citizenship embedded within its Constitutional architecture:

  1. Fundamental Rights (Articles 12–35)
  • Right to Equality (Art. 14–18)
  • Right to Life and Personal Liberty (Art. 21), which includes right to health, education (via judicial interpretation)
  1. Directive Principles of State Policy (Articles 36–51)
  • Provision of adequate livelihood (Art. 39)
  • Equal pay for equal work (Art. 39d)
  • Right to work, education, and public assistance (Art. 41)
  • Provision for just and humane working conditions (Art. 42)
  1. Social Welfare Legislation
  • MGNREGA (Right to work)
  • RTE Act (Right to education)
  • NFSA (Right to food)
  • Ayushman Bharat (Right to health)

Thus, social citizenship in India is anchored in both rights-based and welfare-based approaches.

Sociological Analysis

Sociological Analysis

  1. T.H. Marshall’s Perspective

Marshall’s theory emphasizes that social citizenship helps integrate working-class populations into the nation by ensuring minimum standards of living and social participation.

  1. Marxist View

Marxist sociologists critique social citizenship as bourgeois pacification, arguing that welfare rights are often used to mitigate class conflict without altering the exploitative structure of capitalism.

  1. Feminist Perspective

Feminist scholars argue that Marshall’s conception was male-centric. Social citizenship must include gendered access to resources like maternal care, childcare, and economic opportunities.

  1. Dalit Perspective in India

Dalit thinkers like B.R. Ambedkar advocated for a substantive social citizenship that includes annihilation of caste, land redistribution, and political representation—emphasizing that formal equality is insufficient without dismantling structural barriers.

  1. Pierre Bourdieu – Social Capital and Citizenship

Bourdieu’s concept of social capital highlights that even with formal rights, access to resources depends on one’s embeddedness in networks, class, and culture. Thus, unequal distribution of social capital leads to differential experience of citizenship.

Challenges to Social Citizenship in India

Challenges to Social Citizenship in India

  1. Economic Inequality

Despite multiple schemes, Oxfam (2024) reports that the top 1% holds more than 40% of national wealth. This economic disparity translates into unequal access to social rights.

  1. Caste and Social Exclusion

Caste continues to be a major barrier to effective social citizenship. Manual scavengers, Dalits, and Adivasis remain marginalized despite constitutional guarantees.

  1. Gender Disparities

Access to healthcare, education, and employment is still skewed against women. The digital divide and unpaid care work limit their ability to claim full social citizenship.

  1. Urban-Rural Divide

Urban areas have better infrastructure and service delivery, while rural populations often lack quality access to health and education.

  1. Informalization of Labour

Over 90% of India’s workforce is in the informal sector, devoid of social security and welfare benefits, weakening the promise of social citizenship.

Current Social Citizenship

Current Social Citizenship

  1. One Nation, One Ration Card (ONORC):
    A step towards portable social citizenship, especially for migrant workers.
  2. Digital India and Welfare Delivery:
    Aadhaar-based DBTs and JAM trinity aim to make social citizenship more efficient, but also raise concerns of exclusion due to digital illiteracy and biometric failures.
  3. Uniform Civil Code (UCC):
    Recent debates raise questions about how universal laws may or may not ensure social citizenship for diverse religious and cultural communities.
  4. National Education Policy (NEP):
    Aims to make education inclusive and equitable, thus promoting long-term social citizenship.
  5. Climate Justice and Citizenship:
    Displacement due to floods, droughts, and industrial projects highlight the ecological dimension of social rights, especially for tribal and coastal communities.

Way Forward: Strengthening Social Citizenship in India

  • Universal Social Protection: Include gig workers, informal sector, and women in welfare net.
  • Participatory Governance: Enable bottom-up participation through Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and community-based organizations.
  • Bridging Digital Divide: Promote digital literacy to prevent tech-based exclusion from welfare schemes.
  • Strengthen Local Bodies: Decentralized implementation ensures contextual relevance of social programs.
  • Gender-Responsive Budgeting: Tailor schemes to address women’s specific needs in health, education, and employment.

Conclusion

It is not merely about welfare transfers—it is about enabling dignified, participatory, and equitable living for all. In the Indian context, it is intrinsically linked to addressing caste, class, gender, and regional disparities. As India marches toward becoming a digital and economic superpower, its real strength will lie in democratizing access to social rights, ensuring that citizenship goes beyond documents to lived realities.

For UPSC aspirants, understanding the sociological underpinnings of social citizenship is vital to analyze policies, social movements, and governance challenges through a rights-based lens. This is where sociology bridges the normative ideals of the Constitution with empirical challenges of society.

Previous Year Questions

Paper 1

  • “Discuss T.H. Marshall’s notion of citizenship. How is it relevant in contemporary society?”( 2019)

Paper 2

  • “Social justice and social legislation in India: An analysis.” (2017)
  • “Examine the role of welfare schemes in enhancing social inclusion in India.” (2020)
  • “How do caste and class influence the experience of social citizenship in India?” (2023)

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