Wednesday, April 8, 2026

The Quiet Unmaking of the Voter: Democracy at the Edge of Erasure

How Electoral Rolls Became Instruments of Exclusion, and Constitutional Guardians Turned into Silent Witnesses

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

This essay is an extended narrative reflection on the ongoing crisis of mass voter deletions in India, with a particular focus on West Bengal, where nearly 89 lakh names are reported to have been struck off electoral rolls ahead of elections. Situating this development within similar exercises in Bihar and Tamil Nadu, it argues that what is unfolding is not merely administrative correction but a structural reconfiguration of the electorate. The piece critically examines the role of the Election Commission of India and the Supreme Court of India, suggesting that a combination of institutional passivity, procedural opacity, and political context has produced a moment where democracy appears formally intact but substantively diminished. Through a narrative mode, constitutional references, and historical parallels, the essay foregrounds the erosion of universal suffrage as both a legal and moral crisis.

The Vanishing

It does not begin with a loud announcement. There is no siren, no proclamation, no visible rupture in the machinery of the State. It begins with absence.

A name that once existed on the electoral roll is no longer there. A citizen, who voted in previous elections, suddenly finds herself transformed into a non-entity in the eyes of the Republic. No explanation arrives with clarity. No process feels accessible. What was once a constitutional assurance now appears as a fragile, revocable privilege.

In West Bengal, this absence has multiplied into a phenomenon of staggering proportions—nearly 89 lakh names missing. Districts like Murshidabad, Malda, and North 24 Parganas are not merely administrative units anymore; they are sites where citizenship itself appears to be under quiet negotiation. Entire communities—particularly those already vulnerable—find themselves standing outside the gates of democracy, not by choice, but by deletion.

And yet, elections proceed.

A Pattern That Refuses to Be Accidental

What is happening in West Bengal does not stand alone. It echoes what has already unfolded in Bihar and Tamil Nadu, where the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercises have resulted in similarly massive exclusions. The numbers, when placed together, do not read like corrections—they read like contraction.

State

Voters Deleted (Approx.)

Observations

West Bengal

89 lakh

Concentrated deletions in border and minority-heavy regions

Bihar

65 lakh (draft stage)

Elections advanced without final judicial closure

Tamil Nadu

97 lakh+

Large-scale urban deletions; systemic scale

Kerala

Emerging

Concerns raised during SIR

Puducherry

Emerging

Revision controversies amid elections

These are not marginal adjustments. These are structural subtractions.

The repetition across states begins to suggest design, or at the very least, a deeply entrenched institutional indifference to the consequences of such scale.

The Courtroom as Theatre

If the citizen’s first instinct in the face of such exclusion is to seek refuge in the judiciary, what unfolds there is both perplexing and unsettling.

The Supreme Court of India has not been absent. It has heard petitions. It has expressed concern. It has issued directions—asking the Election Commission of India to ensure transparency, to publish names, to clarify procedures. It has acknowledged, in careful language, the “stress and strain” imposed upon citizens.

But beyond this, something crucial is missing: finality.

In Bihar, even as lakhs of names were excluded, the Court chose not to halt the process. It allowed the machinery to move forward, even as questions remained unresolved. Elections approached, and then elections passed, without a definitive judicial pronouncement on whether the very foundation of those elections—the voter list—was constitutionally sound.

Now, in West Bengal, the script appears to be repeating itself.

The hearings continue. The concerns are recorded. The language remains measured. But outside the courtroom, reality moves faster than judicial caution. Rolls are finalized. Campaigns intensify. The democratic clock does not pause for constitutional uncertainty.

It is here that the line between adjudication and performance begins to blur.

The courtroom begins to resemble a space where democracy is narrated, not enforced.

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar had warned that the success of the Constitution depends not on its text, but on those entrusted with its implementation. When the Court, the final guardian, chooses incremental observation over decisive intervention, it does not remain neutral—it becomes historically consequential.

In electoral matters, delay is not benign. It is transformative. By the time a final judgment arrives—if it arrives at all—the election is over, the government is formed, and the democratic injury has already been absorbed into political reality.

The Burden That Shifts Silently

Meanwhile, the citizen is asked to prove herself again.

The logic of the process has subtly shifted. Instead of the State ensuring inclusion, the individual must now establish eligibility, often through documentation that is difficult to procure, especially for the poor, the migrant, the marginalised.

The Election Commission of India, constitutionally entrusted with safeguarding electoral integrity, appears increasingly to operate through a framework where exclusion precedes verification.

This inversion is not merely procedural—it is philosophical.

The Constitution begins with “We, the People.”
The process now seems to begin with: “Prove that you are among the people.”

Politics in the Background, Power in the Foreground

No electoral process exists in a vacuum. The political stakes in West Bengal are immense. The Bharatiya Janata Party seeks to expand its footprint, while Mamata Banerjee fights to retain power.

In this charged atmosphere, allegations of targeted deletions have emerged. Communities already situated at the edges of power structures now find themselves confronting a new kind of exclusion—one that operates not through overt denial, but through bureaucratic disappearance.

Leaders like Rahul Gandhi have raised concerns publicly, pointing to the scale and pattern of deletions. Yet, these warnings seem to dissolve into the larger institutional silence.

The machinery moves forward.

Elections Without Assurance

India has, in its past, shown the capacity to pause elections when circumstances threatened their credibility. Insurgency, instability, and unrest have all been recognised as valid grounds for deferral.

But today, a different kind of crisis unfolds—a crisis not of security, but of legitimacy.

What does it mean to hold an election when the voter list itself is contested, incomplete, and possibly exclusionary?

What is being measured when votes are counted, if the very pool of voters has been altered in opaque ways?

An election without a trustworthy roll is not an expression of the popular will—it is a managed arithmetic.

The Republic and Its Reflection

Mahatma Mahatma Gandhi once observed that democracy is not a mechanical arrangement but a moral order. That moral order rests on trust—trust that every citizen counts, that every voice matters, that institutions will act not merely with legality, but with fairness.

Today, that trust appears strained.

The deletions in West Bengal are not just about one state. They are a mirror held up to the Republic. In that mirror, one sees not the collapse of democracy, but something perhaps more insidious—its gradual hollowing.

The forms remain intact: elections are announced, campaigns are conducted, votes are cast.

But beneath these forms, something essential is shifting.

Conclusion: The Silence That Shapes Outcomes

Democracy does not always die in darkness. Sometimes, it recedes in daylight—through procedures that appear legitimate, through institutions that speak but do not act, through courts that observe but do not conclude.

The deletion of 89 lakh voters is not just a statistic. It is a question.

A question about who belongs.
A question about who decides.
And ultimately, a question about what remains of a democracy when its people begin to disappear from its most fundamental process.

When exclusion becomes systemic and accountability becomes deferred, democracy does not collapse—it is carefully, quietly rewritten.

Footnotes

1. Article 326, Constitution of India — Mandates elections based on universal adult suffrage.

2. Representation of the People Act, 1950 — Governs preparation and revision of electoral rolls.

3. Representation of the People Act, 1951 — Governs conduct of elections.

4. Proceedings before the Supreme Court of India on Special Intensive Revision (SIR), Bihar (2025–2026).

5. Data released by the Election Commission of India on voter deletions across states.

6. Historical precedents of election deferral: Punjab (1987–1992), Jammu & Kashmir (1990s), Assam (1980s).

 

 

The Anatomy of Unfinished Goodbyes:

 A Philosophical Inquiry into Attachment, Rupture, and the Persistence of Emotional Memory

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

Human relationships do not merely happen; they are slowly composed—through gestures, silences, expectations, and shared meanings—until they become indistinguishable from one’s sense of self. Yet, just as organically as they emerge, they can fracture, often without warning or closure. This essay explores the “physiology” of relationships: how they form, deepen, rupture, and persist as unresolved emotional residues. Drawing from philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience, it argues that unfinished endings are not aberrations but intrinsic to the human condition. They expose the limits of control, reveal the architecture of attachment, and compel an inward turn toward self-authored closure.

I. The Quiet Genesis of Connection

Relationships rarely announce their arrival. They begin subtly—in shared attention, in recognition, in the quiet affirmation that another consciousness sees us. Over time, these fleeting interactions accumulate, forming what sociologists call emotional capital.

Psychologically, this process is deeply rooted in attachment theory, pioneered by John Bowlby. Bowlby argued that human beings are biologically predisposed to form bonds as a survival mechanism. These bonds, initially observed between infants and caregivers, later generalize into adult relationships.

Neuroscience complements this view. Studies on pair bonding show that chemicals like oxytocin and dopamine reinforce closeness, making relationships not just emotional experiences but biochemical realities. The brain begins to encode the other person as part of its reward system.

“To be attached is not merely to feel; it is to reorganize one’s inner world around another.”

Thus, relationships evolve from interaction into integration. The other person ceases to be external—they become a part of how we think, feel, and exist.

II. When Connection Becomes Constitution

As relationships deepen, they cross a threshold: they are no longer choices; they become conditions of being.

The philosopher Martin Buber described this transition through his concept of the I-Thou relationship—a space where individuals encounter each other not as objects, but as presences. In such encounters, identity itself becomes relational.

Modern psychology echoes this through the idea of self-expansion theory (Aron & Aron, 1986), which posits that close relationships allow individuals to incorporate aspects of others into their own self-concept.

This is why certain relationships feel indispensable. They are not merely “important”—they are structural. Removing them is not like losing an object; it is like losing a limb.

“Some people do not enter our lives; they rearrange its architecture.”

III. The Subtle Turning: From Intimacy to Instability

Yet, embedded within every deep connection is a paradox: the very closeness that binds also creates vulnerability.

Small fractures begin invisibly—misaligned expectations, unspoken resentments, asymmetries of effort. Sociological studies on relational breakdown emphasize that most conflicts are not explosive but accumulative. They gather quietly until they reach a tipping point.

Neuroscientific research on emotional pain reveals something striking: the brain processes social rejection in the same regions as physical pain (Eisenberger & Lieberman, 2004). This is why relational ruptures do not feel metaphorically painful—they are literally so.

“The heart does not break in a moment; it erodes in silence.”

At this stage, relationships often resemble what might be called an emotional ulcer—irritated, inflamed, but still contained. The rupture, when it comes, is not sudden; it is the culmination of long, invisible processes.

IV. The Rupture: When the Ulcer Bursts

There comes a moment—often ordinary on the surface—when the accumulated strain breaks open. Words are said, silences harden, or departures occur without explanation.

This is where unfinished endings are born.

Philosophically, such moments confront us with the limits of human control. As Jean-Paul Sartre argued, others are fundamentally free, and this freedom includes the ability to leave, to withdraw, or to transform beyond our expectations.

Psychologically, the absence of closure creates what researchers call cognitive dissonance. The mind, wired for coherence, struggles to reconcile the intensity of what was with the ambiguity of how it ended.

“An unanswered goodbye is not an absence of meaning; it is an excess of it.”

The pain here is not just loss—it is unresolved meaning. Questions linger, narratives remain incomplete, and the mind circles endlessly around what could have been explained but never was.

V. The Persistence of Emotional Memory

Why do such relationships continue to ache long after they end?

The answer lies in the nature of memory itself. Emotional experiences are encoded more deeply than neutral ones, particularly when they involve attachment and loss. The amygdala and hippocampus work together to preserve these memories with remarkable intensity.

Moreover, unresolved endings lack what psychologists call narrative closure. Without a coherent story, the mind cannot “file away” the experience. It remains active, intrusive, and recurrent.

“What ends without understanding continues without rest.”

This is why people cannot simply “return to who they were before.” The relationship has altered their psychological and neurological landscape. There is no going back—only moving forward with a changed self.

VI. The Impossibility of Returning

A common longing after rupture is the desire to restore things to their original state. Yet this is fundamentally impossible.

Philosophically, time is irreversible. As Heraclitus famously suggested, one cannot step into the same river twice. The individuals involved have changed, the context has shifted, and the relationship itself has been transformed by the rupture.

Psychologically, trust—once broken—cannot simply be reinstated. Studies on trust repair show that while reconciliation is possible, it requires acknowledgment, accountability, and time. In their absence, the relationship remains structurally unstable.

“We do not return to old relationships; we only revisit their ruins.”

VII. Living with the Unfinished

If closure cannot be expected from others, where does it come from?

Here lies the central philosophical insight: closure is not something we receive; it is something we construct. It is an act of interpretation, of meaning-making, of deciding how the story will live within us.

Existential philosophy, particularly in the work of Viktor Frankl, emphasizes this capacity. Even in situations devoid of resolution, individuals retain the freedom to assign meaning.

Practically, this involves:

Accepting ambiguity rather than resisting it

Reframing the relationship as part of growth rather than failure

Allowing emotional memory without letting it define identity

“Silence is not empty; it is a space where meaning waits to be made.”

VIII. The Ethics of Letting Go

Letting go is often misunderstood as forgetting. In reality, it is a reconfiguration of attachment. The other person is no longer central, but neither are they erased.

This process requires what might be called emotional ethics:

The discipline to not seek answers where none will come

The humility to accept one’s limited control over others

The courage to continue forming connections despite the risk of rupture

In this sense, unfinished endings are not failures of relationship but revelations of its nature.

Conclusion: The Quiet Strength of Unresolved Lives

To live is to enter into relationships that may not conclude neatly. To love is to risk fragmentation. And to grow is to learn that not all stories are meant to be completed.

Unfinished goodbyes, painful as they are, serve as profound teachers. They strip away illusions, expose vulnerabilities, and compel a deeper engagement with the self.

“We are not shaped by the endings we receive, but by the meanings we create in their absence.”

In the end, the task is not to eliminate ambiguity but to inhabit it—to find, within its restless silence, a steadiness that does not depend on others.

For it is there, in that quiet and often uncomfortable space, that transformation truly begins.

Footnotes

1. John Bowlby, Attachment and Loss, Vol. 1: Attachment (New York: Basic Books, 1969). Bowlby’s foundational work establishes attachment as a biologically rooted system shaping human relational bonds across the lifespan.

2. Mary Ainsworth et al., “Patterns of Attachment: A Psychological Study of the Strange Situation” (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1978). Expands Bowlby’s theory through empirical observation of attachment styles.

3. Aron, A., & Aron, E. N., “Love and the Expansion of Self: Understanding Attraction and Satisfaction” (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986). Introduces self-expansion theory, explaining how close relationships become integrated into one’s identity.

4. Martin Buber, I and Thou (1923). A philosophical account of relational existence, emphasizing authentic encounters that transcend subject-object divisions.

5. Naomi Eisenberger and Matthew Lieberman, “Why Rejection Hurts: A Common Neural Alarm System for Physical and Social Pain” (Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2004). Demonstrates that social rejection activates brain regions associated with physical pain.

6. Leon Festinger, A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance (Stanford University Press, 1957). Explains the psychological discomfort caused by unresolved or contradictory experiences.

7. Joseph LeDoux, The Emotional Brain (1996). Details how emotional memories are encoded and persist through neural mechanisms involving the amygdala.

8. Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness (1943). Articulates the radical freedom of individuals, including the capacity to withdraw from relationships.

9. Heraclitus, Fragments. Introduces the doctrine of flux—emphasizing the impossibility of returning to prior states of being.

10. Viktor Frankl, Man’s Search for Meaning (1946). Argues that meaning-making is central to human survival, especially in situations lacking closure.

11. Baumeister, R. F., & Leary, M. R., “The Need to Belong: Desire for Interpersonal Attachments as a Fundamental Human Motivation” (Psychological Bulletin, 1995). Establishes belongingness as a core psychological need.

12. Mikulincer, M., & Shaver, P. R., Attachment in Adulthood: Structure, Dynamics, and Change (Guilford Press, 2007). Examines how early attachment patterns influence adult relationships and their breakdown.

13. Gottman, J. M., The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work (1999). Identifies patterns of relational deterioration, including emotional withdrawal and accumulated resentment.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

A Generation Betrayed: Youth, Precarity, and the Collapse of Promise in India

From Disintegrating Selves to Disposable Labour: A Marxist Anatomy of Crisis under Neoliberal Capitalism

—Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

This paper reconstructs the contemporary crisis of youth in India through a continuous, data-grounded narrative that brings together labour statistics (2023–2025), migration trends, and sociological analysis. It argues that the apparent stabilization of unemployment rates conceals a deeper systemic breakdown characterized by precarious labour, educational disillusionment, rising costs of existence, and the fragmentation of subjectivity. The essay situates youth distress within the broader restructuring of neoliberal capitalism, marked by the withdrawal of the state, the commodification of everyday life, and the ideological displacement of economic concerns by identity-driven politics. By incorporating regional dynamics from Haryana and Punjab—including large-scale migration—the paper reveals how the crisis extends beyond national boundaries into a global circuit of precarious labour. It concludes by reimagining “choosing the light” not as individual resilience, but as a collective political act rooted in consciousness, solidarity, and structural transformation.

Keywords

Youth unemployment; precarity; alienation; neoliberalism; migration; informal labour; digital capitalism; social reproduction; identity politics; India

I. The Quiet Violence Beneath Numbers

There is a peculiar calm in the official narrative of employment in India today. Numbers appear reassuring. The unemployment rate hovers near 3.1%, and youth unemployment, though higher, shows signs of moderation. On paper, the storm seems to have passed.

And yet, step outside the statistical frame, and a different reality emerges—one marked not by stability but by quiet disintegration. The crisis has not disappeared; it has merely changed its form. It no longer announces itself through dramatic spikes but settles into everyday life as anxiety, uncertainty, and a slow erosion of hope.

This contradiction becomes visible when we trace the trajectory of youth unemployment:

Table 1: Youth Unemployment Trends in India

Year

Overall Youth Unemployment (%)

Urban Youth (%)

Rural Youth (%)

2023–24

~10.2

2024

10.3

14.3

8.7

2025

9.9

13.6

8.3

Source: PLFS 2024–25

The decline is real, but its meaning is deceptive. It signals not the resolution of crisis, but its normalization.

The unease sharpens further when we move to regions like Haryana and Punjab—once symbols of agrarian prosperity and upward mobility, now sites of growing youth distress.

Table 1A: Unemployment Rate – Haryana & Punjab (2024–25 Estimates)

State

Unemployment Rate (%)

Haryana

~6.0 – 7.0

Punjab

~5.5 – 6.5

India

~3.1

Here, the gap between national optimism and regional reality widens into a structural fracture. For youth in these regions, the future is not merely uncertain—it is shrinking.

II. Education and the Manufacture of Broken Dreams

If there is one institution that has shaped the aspirations of Indian youth over the past two decades, it is education. Degrees multiplied, universities expanded, and enrolments surged. Education became the language of hope.

But hope, when repeatedly deferred, turns into disillusionment.

The labour market has not absorbed the expanding pool of educated youth. On the contrary, it has exposed the fragility of the promise itself.

Table 1B: Educated Youth Unemployment (Indicative, 2023–24)

Category

Unemployment Rate (%)

Graduate youth (India)

~15–20

Graduate youth (Haryana)

~20+

Graduate youth (Punjab)

~18–20

The paradox is devastating: the more one studies, the more uncertain one’s future becomes.

Education, once imagined as liberation, now functions as a speculative investment. Families borrow, sacrifice, and endure, only to find that degrees do not translate into dignity. The failure of the system is internalized as personal inadequacy. This is where the crisis becomes psychological—the slow disintegration of self-worth.

III. Work Without Security, Life Without Anchors

Employment has not disappeared; it has been transformed.

What dominates today is not the absence of work, but the absence of stability. The structure of employment reveals this clearly:

Table 2: Employment Composition in India (2025)

Employment Type

Share (%)

Self-employed

56.2

Regular salaried

23.6

Casual labour

~20

Secure, long-term employment has become the exception rather than the norm.

In Haryana and Punjab, this transformation takes distinct forms:

Table 2A: Employment Pattern (Haryana & Punjab)

State

Self-employed (%)

Regular Salaried (%)

Casual Labour (%)

Haryana

~45–50

~30

~20–25

Punjab

~55–60

~25

~15–20

In Haryana, contractualization dominates even within formal sectors. In Punjab, agrarian stagnation pushes youth toward unstable self-employment.

The result is a life without anchors. Work exists, but it does not organize life. It does not promise continuity. It does not allow planning. It does not sustain identity.

IV. Migration: Escape, Debt, and the Global Trap

When the local economy closes its doors, the horizon shifts outward.

Migration, particularly in Punjab and increasingly in Haryana, has become the defining aspiration of youth. But aspiration here is inseparable from compulsion.

Table 3: Overseas Migration Trends (Punjab & Haryana Youth)

Indicator

Punjab

Haryana

Share in India’s student visas

30–35%

8–10%

Annual migration

2.5–3 lakh

80,000–1 lakh

Avg. cost (₹)

15–30 lakh

12–25 lakh

Migration is financed not by surplus, but by sacrifice—land sold, debts incurred, futures mortgaged.

And what awaits abroad?

Not necessarily prosperity, but another layer of precarity.

Low-wage jobs, visa restrictions, cultural isolation, and relentless pressure to repay debt define the migrant experience. The crisis does not end; it travels.

Migration, thus, becomes a global extension of local distress—a circulation of labour within a system that offers movement without security.

V. The Expanding Cost of Existence

If income is unstable, expenditure is relentless.

Life today is saturated with market dependence. To exist socially is to spend continuously:

Smartphones and data for connectivity

Transportation across fragmented geographies

Coaching, exams, certifications

Rent, healthcare, lifestyle consumption

Migration expenses and remittance

A generation ago, many of these were not necessities. Today, they are unavoidable.

This creates a cruel paradox: survival requires money, but money requires stable work—which is precisely what is absent.

VI. Digital Life: Illusion as Survival

In the absence of stable material anchors, youth turn to digital spaces.

Social media offers visibility where society withholds recognition. It creates worlds where success appears immediate, accessible, and aesthetic.

But this is a fragile refuge.

The constant comparison between curated lives and lived realities produces anxiety. The pursuit of validation replaces the pursuit of stability. Identity becomes performative, fragmented, and dependent on external affirmation.

The youth clings to the phone not out of addiction alone, but out of necessity—like a bee to a flower that offers momentary sustenance.

VII. When Survival Turns Illicit

Where formal pathways close, informal and illegal ones open.

In Haryana, proximity to urban economies feeds informal networks. In Punjab, drug economies and migration fraud rackets fill the vacuum left by declining opportunities.

These are not aberrations. They are structural responses.

The shadow economy mirrors the logic of capitalism itself—quick returns, low entry barriers, constant recruitment. It offers what the formal system denies: immediacy.

VIII. The Crisis of Social Life

Economic instability does not remain confined to the workplace; it spills into intimate life.

Marriage is delayed or strained. Relationships become sites of negotiation under scarcity. Gendered violence rises within conditions of stress and insecurity.

Women, in particular, bear a double burden—precarious participation in labour markets alongside unpaid care responsibilities.

This is a crisis of social reproduction: the very fabric that sustains society begins to fray.

IX. Politics Without Material Memory

And yet, amid this profound crisis, public discourse rarely centers these issues.

Instead, politics is saturated with identity—caste alignments, religious polarization, cultural nationalism. Emotional energies are mobilized, but material questions are displaced.

This is not accidental. It is an ideological shift.

The attention of youth is redirected—from unemployment to identity, from economic justice to symbolic assertion. The crisis remains, but its language disappears.

X. Silence, Fragmentation, and the Loss of Collective Voice

Perhaps the most unsettling feature of this moment is silence.

Not the silence of absence, but the silence of fragmentation.

Youth struggle, but alone. Each interprets structural failure as personal defeat. Digital life fragments attention. Competition replaces solidarity.

The result: a society full of suffering, yet devoid of collective articulation.

XI. Choosing the Light: A Politics of Awakening

In such darkness, what does it mean to choose the light?

It is not naïve optimism. It is not withdrawal into spirituality. It is not individual resilience alone.

To choose the light is to see clearly.

To recognize that:

Unemployment is systemic, not personal

Precarity is structural, not accidental

Alienation is produced, not inherent

It is to rebuild solidarity where fragmentation prevails. To reclaim politics as a space of material transformation. To shift attention back to employment, dignity, and justice.

XII. Conclusion: From Rupture to Renewal

The crisis of youth in India is not episodic; it is structural. It reflects a system that produces aspiration without opportunity, movement without security, and identity without stability.

And yet, within this rupture lies possibility.

Disintegration can give rise to consciousness. Consciousness can give rise to solidarity. Solidarity can give rise to transformation.

To choose the light, then, is not to escape reality—but to confront it, collectively.

Footnotes

1. Government of India, Periodic Labour Force Survey Annual Report 2025.

2. National Statistical Office, PLFS 2023–24 Key Indicators.

3. International Labour Organization, India Employment Report 2024.

4. Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, Annual Reports.

5. National Crime Records Bureau, Crime in India Reports.