Abstract: The governance of tribal areas in Manipur remains one of the most complex constitutional and political questions in Northeast India. Historically governed through customary institutions such as chieftainship, the hill regions of Manipur later became subject to modern administrative frameworks following India’s independence. Over time, multiple governance models have been debated as mechanisms for protecting tribal rights, autonomy, and land ownership. These include the traditional chieftainship system, Article 371C of the Constitution of India, the Sixth Schedule autonomous governance model, and proposals for Union Territory status. This paper provides a comparative constitutional and policy analysis of these four governance models.
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Meitei–Kuki–Naga Relations Before and After Indian Independence
History, Colonial Transformations, Post-Colonial State Formation, and Contemporary Conflict
Abstract
The relationship among the Meitei, Kuki, and Naga communities in Manipur is shaped by pre-colonial political economy, colonial ethnic classification, and post-independence state restructuring. Prior to British intervention, relations were characterised by fluctuating patterns of trade, warfare, tribute, and political subordination between valley-based Meitei kings and surrounding hill tribes. Colonial policies restructured land, identity, and administration, crystallising ethnic boundaries. After India’s independence and Manipur’s merger in 1949, democratic politics, constitutional safeguards, insurgent nationalism, and competing territorial claims transformed earlier socio-political interactions into rigid ethnic contestations. This paper traces these transformations through archival records, colonial ethnography, and post-independence political developments, demonstrating how historical state formation, identity institutionalisation, and development asymmetries culminated in protracted ethnic conflict, including the large-scale violence from 2023 onward.