मराठी

Overview of The Challenges of Cultural Diversity

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Estimated time: 37 minutes
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: The Importance of Community Identity

  • Community identity gives individuals a sense of self, belonging and security in society.
  • It is mainly ascriptive, based on birth and belonging, not on achievement or choice.
  • Family, language, religion, caste and region shape identity through socialisation.
  • Community identities are deeply emotional and difficult to shed, even if one wants to.
  • Strong attachment to community can also lead to conflict and hostility when identities feel threatened.
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Communities

  • Community is a group based on shared ties like language, religion, region or culture.
  • It gives individuals a sense of belonging and identity from birth.
  • Community identity is usually ascriptive (by birth, not choice).
  • Emotional attachment to community is often very strong.
  • Threats to community identity can lead to conflict or violence. 
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Nation

  • A nation is a large-scale community of communities.
  • Members share a desire for political unity.
  • A nation may be based on shared history, culture or institutions.
  • Not all nations share one language, religion or ethnicity.
  • A nation becomes politically powerful when it seeks a state of its own. 
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Nation-State

  • A state is a political institution controlling territory and people.
  • According to Max Weber, the state has a monopoly over legitimate force.
  • A nation-state links one nation with one state.
  • In modern times, states claim legitimacy in the name of the nation.
  • States may try to manage or suppress cultural diversity to maintain unity. 
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Cultural Diversity and India as a Nation-state

  • India is one of the most socially and culturally diverse countries in the world, with vast linguistic, religious and regional diversity.
  • The Indian Constitution recognises multiple languages and religions, ensuring legal protection to diversity.
  • India follows a secular model, where religion and culture are not removed from public life but are equally respected.
  • The Indian state has rejected complete assimilation, allowing communities to maintain distinct identities.
  • Despite challenges in implementation, India is considered a successful example of a “state-nation” rather than a forced nation-state.
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Regionalism in the Indian Context

  • Regionalism in India arises from diversity of language, culture, tribe and religion.
  • It is strengthened by geographical concentration of identity markers in specific regions.
  • A sense of regional deprivation fuels regional sentiments.
  • Indian federalism helps accommodate regional aspirations and demands.
  • After Independence, India reorganised states to manage ethno-linguistic diversity.
  • Language and tribal identity, along with ecology and deprivation, played a key role in state formation (e.g., Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh).
  • India today has 28 States and 8 Union Territories, reflecting regional diversity within a federal structure. 
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Minority Rights and Nation Building

  • Indian nationalism is inclusive and democraticrecognising diversity and pluralism.
  • Minority rights are essential to protect disadvantaged groups from discrimination.
  • Minorities are defined not just by numbers but by relative disadvantage and lack of power.
  • The Indian Constitution provides special safeguards to ensure minority protection.
  • Respect for minority rights strengthens national unity and democratic nation-building. 
CBSE: Class 12

Definition: Communalism

“In everyday language, the word ‘communalism’ refers to aggressive chauvinism based on religious identity.” 

CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Communalism

  • Communalism is an aggressive political ideology linked to religion, in which one’s own religious group is seen as superior and others as inferior or illegitimate.
  • It is about politics, not religion; there is no necessary relationship between personal faith and communalism.
  • Communalism promotes a political identity based on religion, and encourages hostility towards people who follow other religions.
  • It treats religious identity as overriding all other identities, such as class, caste, occupation or political beliefs.
  • Communalism has been a major source of tension and violence in India, leading to repeated communal riots from pre-Independence times to the present.
CBSE: Class 12

Definition: Secularism

“A secular person or state is one that does not favour any particular religion over others.” 

CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Secularism

  • Secularism means separation of religious and political authority, especially in the Western context, where church and state are kept apart.
  • It emerged through the process of secularisation, in which religion gradually retreated from public life and became a personal matter.
  • In India, secularism means equal respect for all religions, not hostility towards religion or complete separation.
  • A secular state does not favour any one religion, and treats all religions equally in public life.
  • Secularism is opposed to communalism, as it rejects religious chauvinism and promotes religious harmony and pluralism. 
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: State

  • The state claims to represent the nation, but it can become independent of the people.
  • It includes institutions like the legislature, bureaucracy, judiciary, police and armed forces.
  • When insulated from the people, the state can turn authoritarian.
  • An authoritarian state limits or abolishes civil liberties such as freedom of speech and political activity.
  • A democratic state is accountable to the people and protects their rights. 
CBSE: Class 12

Definition: Civil Society

  • “Civil society is the name given to the broad arena which lies beyond the private domain of the family, but outside the domain of both state and market.” 
  • “Civil society is the non-state and non-market part of the public domain in which individuals get together voluntarily to create institutions and organisations.” 
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Civil Society

  • Civil society exists outside the domain of both the state and the market.
  • It consists of voluntary organisations formed by citizens.
  • These include NGOs, trade unions, political parties, media and religious organisations.
  • Civil society keeps a watch on the state and protests against injustice.
  • It helps make the state accountable and responsive to people’s needs. 
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