India being one of the largest democracies in the world is a resurrected story of the interaction between modern economic progression and the constant suffering and instability. This paper analyses how poverty and vulnerability are intertwined with the politics and economy of India's social realities. It is important to bear in mind that poverty and vulnerability are not just an economic characteristic; they are more equally outcomes of historical, structural, and governance factors that affect distribution of resource endowment. The study revisits colonialism up to post-independence policies to show how socio-economic inequality was fostered and sustained over several years. Today, it is economic liberalisation, caste and gender discrimination, high unemployment, and limited accessibility to fundamentals that add to vulnerabilities. This situation is combined with the high prevalence of the informal sector activity and the lack of sufficient social protection that increases economic vulnerability in African countries. However, several governmental poverty rebalancing processes such as the PDS and MGREGA remain closely imperfect due to policy gaps in the implementation process. The paper also discusses the application to context on social justice to show that the initiatives aim to provide justice, equality, and voice to the oppressed groups. It also emphasizes democratic consolidation which means institutionalization of the democratic policy, enhancing democratic governance and nurturing social democracy to tackle the issue of socio-economic cleavages. This paper's policy advocacy agenda includes a multitude of social rights protection, decentralisation, development of education and healthcare system, and promotion of civil society activism. The problem of poverty and vulnerability in India cannot be solved with a single European social policy - the state needs to combine social justice, relevant to India, with an emphasis on the democratic nature of the country's development, creating the preconditions for building a stable society.
M.H.Hebbal (Wed,) studied this question.