The decade 2001–2011 represented a pivotal transitional phase in the demographic landscape of Pratapgarh district, Uttar Pradesh, a predominantly rural and agrarian region in eastern India characterized by moderate socio-economic development and traditional social structures. This study analyses key population dynamics and demographic changes in Pratapgarh district using secondary data primarily from the Census of India 2001 and 2011, supplemented by sources such as District Census Handbooks, Sample Registration System (SRS), and related government reports. The analysis focuses on indicators including population size and growth, density, sex ratio, child sex ratio, literacy rates, age structure, dependency ratio, workforce participation, and rural-urban distribution, while adopting a descriptive-analytical approach with temporal comparisons and contextual interpretations relative to Uttar Pradesh and national benchmarks. The district's total population increased from 27,31,174 in 2001 to 32,09,141 in 2011, yielding a decadal growth rate of 17.50% (or approximately 16.2–17.5% in some records), a noticeable slowdown from the prior decade's higher rate (~23.5%) and below Uttar Pradesh's state average of 20.23%. This moderated growth, coupled with rising density from ~735–761 to 860–864 persons per sq km, reflected emerging fertility decline, family planning adoption, delayed marriages, and substantial out-migration of working-age males seeking employment in nearby urban centers like Prayagraj and Lucknow. Urbanization remained limited, rising marginally from ~5.5% to 7.7–7.8%, with over 92% of the population continuing to reside in rural areas amid agrarian constraints. Literacy emerged as a major success story, surging from 57.6% (or ~55.9%) in 2001 to 70.09–73.1% in 2011—a gain of 12–15 percentage points—driven by initiatives like Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and mid-day meal programs. Male literacy reached ~81.9%, while female literacy showed the most significant improvement, climbing from ~40–41% to 58–58.5%, narrowing the gender gap and enhancing human capital, particularly in rural settings. Sex ratio trends were mixed: the overall ratio improved from ~923–1004 to 994–998 females per 1,000 males, surpassing Uttar Pradesh's state average (~908–912) and signaling positive effects from awareness campaigns and better female survival. However, the child sex ratio (0–6 years) declined from ~924–936 to 903–917, underscoring persistent son preference, gender biases, and gaps in enforcement of laws like the PCPNDT Act. The age structure shifted positively, with the proportion of children (0–14 years) dropping from ~37% to ~32%, expanding the working-age population (15–59 years) to nearly 60%, and reducing the dependency ratio from ~89 to ~78–80. This youthful demographic bulge offered potential for a demographic dividend, though tempered by agrarian limitations, skill mismatches, and modest workforce participation gains (from ~28.6% to ~30.2%), dominated by agriculture with slight shifts toward non-farm activities. Overall, the 2001–2011 period highlighted Pratapgarh's progression toward demographic stabilization—through slower growth, fertility reduction (evidenced by declining child proportions and SRS birth rates), literacy gains, and health improvements linked to programs like the National Rural Health Mission—while grappling with enduring challenges such as gender imbalances (particularly in child ratios), rural economic stagnation, limited industrialization, and migration-driven pressures. These findings underscore the influence of national and state policies in fostering positive changes in a high-fertility, rural-dominated context, yet emphasize the need for sustained interventions in gender equity, female empowerment, vocational skilling, rural non-farm employment, and enforcement of protective measures to fully harness the district's demographic momentum for inclusive and sustainable development. This district-level analysis contributes to nuanced understanding of localized demographic transitions in Uttar Pradesh and provides a foundation for targeted policymaking and future research.
Singh et al. (Sun,) studied this question.