A Socio-Legal Analysis of Opaque Governmental Agricultural Policiesand Their Structural Impact on Farming Communities in India
Keywords:
agricultural policy, farmer rights, socio-legal analysis, MSP, farm laws, IndiaAbstract
Agriculture remains the backbone of India's socioeconomic fabric, sustaining approximately 55% of the total workforce. Yet farmers—the primary stakeholders of the agrarian economy—are consistently marginalised through policy frameworks designed and executed with minimal transparency, inadequate legislative consultation, and systemic legal exclusion. This paper undertakes a socio-legal inquiry into governmental agricultural policies in India, examining how structural opacity in policy design, opaque budgetary allocations, and asymmetric information access collectively disadvantage farming communities. Drawing on four in-depth Indian case studies—the Farm Laws Crisis (2020–2021), the Minimum Support Price (MSP) Non-Binding Framework, the PM-KISAN Implementation Gaps, and the Land Acquisition Controversies under the RFCTLARR Act—this research maps the nexus between legal architecture, political economy, and agrarian distress. Using a doctrinal-cum-empirical analytical framework, the study argues that hidden policy decisions perpetuate structural inequality, violate farmers' constitutional rights under Articles 14, 19, and 21, and demand urgent socio-legal redress. The paper concludes with a rights-based policy reform agenda grounded in the principles of transparency, participatory governance, and distributive justice.
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