सं Samvidhan

The Constitution of India

Article 338A

National Commission for Scheduled Tribes

Why this exists

Originally, one joint National Commission for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes existed under Article 338. Recognising that tribal communities face distinct historical, cultural, and developmental challenges different from Scheduled Castes, the Constitution (89th Amendment) Act, 2003 split the body into two: Article 338 for Scheduled Castes and a new Article 338A dedicated solely to Scheduled Tribes. The goal was sharper, more focused oversight of tribal welfare, land rights, forest rights, displacement issues, and constitutional safeguards like the Fifth and Sixth Schedules.

Common misconceptions
  • Myth: The NCST and the National Commission for Scheduled Castes are the same body.
    Fact: They used to be combined under Article 338, but the 89th Amendment in 2003 split them into two separate commissions — Article 338 for Scheduled Castes and Article 338A for Scheduled Tribes.
  • Myth: The Commission's recommendations are legally binding on governments.
    Fact: The Constitution only requires that reports be placed before Parliament or state legislatures with an explanation of action taken or reasons for non-acceptance; it does not make the recommendations mandatory to implement.