Social Justice – Education and Health

Social Justice – Education and Health

Social justice means fairness, equality, and dignity in society. It ensures that no person is denied opportunities because of caste, gender, religion, region, or economic condition.

Among all dimensions of social justice, education and health are the most important. They are called foundational rights because:

  • Education gives people the knowledge and skills to improve their lives.
  • Health gives them the strength and ability to use those opportunities.

Without proper education and healthcare, the dream of social justice and equality remains incomplete.

Why Education and Health are Key to Social Justice?

  1. Education reduces poverty, breaks caste and gender barriers, and creates equal opportunities.
  2. Health ensures that people can live with dignity and contribute to society.
  3. Both create a level playing field for the poor and marginalized.
  4. They are essential for achieving the goals of welfare state and inclusive growth.

Constitutional Provisions

ArticleProvisionRelevance to Social Justice
PreambleJustice – Social, Economic, PoliticalEducation & health are means to achieve this
Art. 14Equality before lawEqual access to schools & hospitals
Art. 15Prohibition of discriminationNo denial of education/health due to caste/religion
Art. 21Right to life & dignityInterpreted as right to education & health
Art. 21ARight to free & compulsory education (6–14 years)RTE Act, 2009
Art. 39(e,f)Protection of children from abuse, opportunities for developmentChild education & health
Art. 41Right to work, education, public assistanceWelfare programmes
Art. 45Early childhood care & educationAnganwadi, ICDS
Art. 46Promotion of SCs, STs, weaker sectionsScholarships, reservations
Art. 47Raise nutrition, standard of living, public healthMid-Day Meal, Ayushman Bharat

Note: The Constitution treats education and health not as charity, but as rights and state responsibilities.

Education and Social Justice

Importance

  • Provides equal opportunities.
  • Empowers marginalized groups (SCs, STs, women, minorities).
  • Helps in social mobility (moving up the social ladder).
  • Creates awareness about rights and duties.

Major Educational Policies and Programmes

  1. Right to Education Act (2009) – Free and compulsory education up to 14 years.
  2. Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA) – Universal primary education.
  3. Mid-Day Meal Scheme – Improves nutrition and attendance.
  4. National Education Policy (2020) – Focus on skill, digital literacy, and inclusiveness.
  5. Scholarships & Reservations – For SCs, STs, OBCs, minorities, and girls.

Table: Education for Social Justice

ProgrammeTarget GroupSocial Justice Impact
RTE Act, 2009Children 6–14 yearsEqual access to basic education
Mid-Day MealSchool childrenReduces hunger, increases enrolment
Kasturba Gandhi Balika VidyalayaGirls (esp. disadvantaged)Promotes gender equality
Scholarships for SC/ST/OBCMarginalized communitiesUpliftment of weaker sections
NEP 2020All studentsSkill-based & inclusive growth

Example: In Odisha, schemes like Gangadhar Meher Siksha Yojana (free textbooks, uniforms, cycles) promote education among rural poor.

Challenges in Education

  1. Dropout rates remain high, especially among girls and tribals.
  2. Quality of education in government schools is poor.
  3. Digital divide – many rural students lack access to online learning.
  4. Regional imbalance in higher education opportunities.

Remark: Education is available but not always accessible and equitable.

Health and Social Justice

Importance

  • Good health is necessary for dignity, productivity, and development.
  • Health inequalities directly affect social justice.
  • Poor and marginalized suffer most from lack of healthcare.

Major Health Policies and Programmes

  1. National Health Mission (NHM) – Strengthens rural & urban health services.
  2. Ayushman Bharat (PMJAY) – Health insurance for 50 crore poor people.
  3. Janani Suraksha Yojana – Safe motherhood, free institutional deliveries.
  4. POSHAN Abhiyaan – Nutrition improvement for children and mothers.
  5. National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme – Target to eliminate TB by 2025.

Table: Health for Social Justice

ProgrammeTarget GroupImpact on Social Justice
Ayushman BharatPoor familiesAccess to affordable healthcare
Janani Suraksha YojanaPregnant womenSafe motherhood, reduced MMR
POSHAN AbhiyaanChildren, mothersNutrition, reduce malnutrition
NRHM / NUHMRural & urban poorAccessible primary healthcare
Mission IndradhanushChildren under 2 yrsUniversal immunization

Example: Biju Swasthya Kalyan Yojana (Odisha) provides free health care for poor families, ensuring equity in health access.

Challenges in Health

  1. India spends only around 2% of GDP on healthcare (low compared to developed nations).
  2. Rural areas lack hospitals, doctors, and medicines.
  3. High out-of-pocket expenditure pushes poor into debt.
  4. Malnutrition and maternal mortality still high in many states.
  5. Inequality in private vs public health facilities.

Remark: Access to healthcare is still a privilege for many, instead of being a right for all.

Education and Health – Two Pillars of Social Justice

Both are closely linked.

  • A healthy child can attend school regularly.
  • An educated mother ensures better nutrition and healthcare for her children.
  • Together, they break the cycle of poverty, illiteracy, and ill-health.

Judicial Support for Education & Health

  • Unni Krishnan vs State of Andhra Pradesh (1993) – Right to education part of Right to Life (Art. 21).
  • Mohini Jain vs State of Karnataka (1992) – “Right to education” declared fundamental.
  • Paschim Banga Case (1996) – Right to health is part of Right to Life.
  • State of Punjab vs Mohinder Singh Chawla (1997) – Health and medical care fundamental rights.

Achievements in Education and Health

Education

  • Literacy rate increased from 18% (1951) to ~77% (Census 2011).
  • Gender gap in education reducing.
  • Rise of SC/ST/OBC students in higher education due to reservations.

Health

  • Life expectancy improved from 32 years (1950) to ~70 years (2020).
  • Infant mortality rate (IMR) reduced.
  • Polio eradicated in India (2014).

Contemporary Issues

  1. COVID-19 Pandemic exposed weaknesses in both education (digital divide) and health (infrastructure gaps).
  2. Privatization of education and health creating inequality.
  3. Mental health issues ignored.
  4. High dropout rates among girls, tribals, and rural poor.
  5. Malnutrition persists despite schemes.

Way Forward

  1. Increase budget allocation for health (to at least 3% of GDP) and education (to 6% as per NEP target).
  2. Strengthen public health and school infrastructure.
  3. Promote digital inclusion for online learning and telemedicine.
  4. Focus on equity-based policies for marginalized groups.
  5. Encourage community participation in health and education management.
  6. Improve awareness about nutrition, hygiene, and importance of schooling.

Conclusion

Education and health are not luxuries, they are basic rights and essential for social justice. A society cannot be just and equal if large sections remain illiterate, unhealthy, and deprived.

India has made progress through RTE, Mid-Day Meal, Ayushman Bharat, POSHAN Abhiyaan, etc., but challenges remain. The goal should be universal, affordable, and quality education and healthcare for all.

Only then can India realize the vision of its Constitution – a society based on justice, equality, and dignity for every citizen.

Quote:
“No society can claim to be civilized if it denies education and healthcare to its weakest sections.”

About the Author

SRIRAM OAS

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