Concepts

Poona Pact, 1932

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At a glance
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Definition

An agreement signed in 1932 between Mahatma Gandhi and Dr B.R. Ambedkar that abandoned separate electorates for the Depressed Classes in favour of reserved seats within joint (general) electorates.

Key points

  • Arose from the Communal Award (1932) of British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, which had granted separate electorates to the Depressed Classes (the "Untouchables").
  • Gandhi opposed separate electorates for the Depressed Classes as a permanent division of Hindu society and began a fast unto death in Yerwada Jail, Poona.
  • The Poona Pact was signed on 24 September 1932; Ambedkar agreed to give up separate electorates in exchange for a larger number of reserved seats for the Depressed Classes within the general (joint) electorate.
  • It substantially increased reserved seats for the Depressed Classes in the provincial and central legislatures compared with the Communal Award.
  • It set the template for reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes within joint electorates that the Constitution later adopted.

Why it matters for CAPF

The Poona Pact is the key social-justice milestone linking Gandhi, Ambedkar, the Communal Award, and the later constitutional scheme of reserved seats, a clear human-rights and polity bridge.

Common confusion

The Poona Pact replaced separate electorates for the Depressed Classes (granted by the Communal Award) with reserved seats in joint electorates; it did not abolish reservation, it changed its form.

One-line recall

1932 Gandhi-Ambedkar pact: dropped separate electorates for Depressed Classes for reserved seats in joint electorates, after Gandhi's fast against the Communal Award.

Parent note

gandhian era and mass movements

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