The Development and Welfare Board for De-notified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Communities (DWBDNC) is a specialized institutional body operating under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, Government of India. Established in 2019 under the Societies Registration Act, 1860, the board’s primary objective is to oversee the targeted implementation of welfare and development programs for historically marginalized communities that do not fit into rigid administrative categories.
Target Demographics Defined
- De-notified Tribes (DNTs): Communities that were officially “notified” as born criminals under the British colonial Criminal Tribes Act, 1871. Although repealed post-independence via the Criminal Tribes Act Repeal Act, 1952, these groups continue to face systemic social profiling.
- Nomadic Tribes: Communities that maintain no fixed habitation and frequently migrate from one region to another for livelihood, traditional occupations, or pastoral activities.
- Semi-Nomadic Tribes: Communities that are mid-way in the transition from a nomadic lifestyle to a settled one, possessing fixed habitations for part of the year but migrating seasonally.
Organizational Structure
The board is headed by a Chairperson and includes a Member and a Member Secretary, alongside ex-officio members from relevant central ministries. The administrative framework ensures inter-ministerial coordination to integrate housing, education, and livelihood schemes.
Key Constitutional and Committee Milestones
Constitutional Safeguards and Commissions
The policy framework governing DNTs, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic communities has evolved through a series of dedicated expert panels and constitutional assessments.
| Year | Commission / Committee | Core Recommendations and Findings |
| 1949 | Ananthasayanam Ayyangar Committee | Recommended the formal repeal of the colonial Criminal Tribes Act, 1871, leading to the enactment of the Habitual Offenders Act. |
| 2002 | National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution (NCRWC) | Led by Justice M.N. Venkatachaliah; recommended specialized economic and educational packages for DNTs. |
| 2006 | First National Commission (Renke Commission) | Estimated the population of DNT/NT communities at roughly 10-12 crore. Highlighted that 50% of these communities lacked caste certificates. |
| 2014 | Second National Commission (Idate Commission) | Recommended the creation of a dedicated permanent commission or board, which directly led to the establishment of the DWBDNC in 2019. |
The Identification Conundrum
A major administrative challenge for these communities is their classification across different state lists. A single DNT group may be categorized as a Scheduled Caste (SC) in one state, a Scheduled Tribe (ST) in another, and an Other Backward Class (OBC) in a third, while some remain completely unclassified. This lack of uniformity restricts uniform access to central welfare schemas.
Flagship Umbrella Initiative: The SEED Scheme
Scheme for Economic Empowerment of DNTs (SEED)
Launched with an outlay of ₹200 crore over a five-year period from FY 2021-22 to FY 2025-26, the SEED scheme serves as the primary financial vehicle managed alongside the DWBDNC. It delivers targeted interventions across four core pillars.
Component 1: Free Competitive Exam Coaching
- Objective: To provide high-quality coaching for DNT, NT, and SNT candidates to enable entry into civil services, banking, insurance, engineering, medicine, and central/state government jobs.
- Eligibility: Families with an annual income of less than or equal to ₹2.50 lakh from all sources.
Component 2: Health Insurance via Ayushman Bharat
- Objective: To provide comprehensive health insurance coverage to eliminate out-of-pocket health expenditures.
- Implementation: Complete financial integration with the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (AB-PMJAY), ensuring an insurance cover of ₹5 lakh per family per year for secondary and tertiary care hospitalization.
Component 3: Livelihood Initiatives (National Livelihood Missions)
- Objective: To upgrade skills and provide self-employment opportunities tailored to the traditional arts, crafts, and pastoral skills of these communities.
- Implementation: Executed through the National Scheduled Castes Finance and Development Corporation (NSFDC) and the National Backward Classes Finance and Development Corporation (NBCFDC).
Component 4: Dedicated Housing Support
- Objective: To provide financial assistance for constructing permanent houses to facilitate a settled lifestyle.
- Implementation: Earmarked funds integrated with the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) to build houses for homeless DNT beneficiaries.
Implementation Challenges and Way Forward
Critical Data Gaps
The absence of a scientifically validated, comprehensive census for DNT, NT, and SNT communities hampers precise policy formulation. The NITI Aayog has actively engaged in mapping these communities using ethnographic studies to create a centralized directory.
Technological Hurdles in Benefit Transfer
The SEED scheme relies on an online portal for direct benefit transfer (DBT). However, low digital literacy, lack of permanent documentation, and difficulties in obtaining valid caste certificates present major barriers to onboarding the most vulnerable segments of these nomadic populations.
Last Modified: June 2, 2026