The dilemma between environmental conservation and human development reflects the conflict between anthropocentric and ecocentric ethics. While housing for the homeless is a constitutional priority under DPSP, forests are crucial for ecology and indigenous survival. The challenge is whether clearing them ensures true welfare or endangers long-term sustainability.
(a) Can deforestation be ethically justified for housing the homeless?
At first glance, providing shelter to the poor aligns with the ethical principle of utilitarianism (Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill), which seeks the “greatest good for the greatest number.” Housing would reduce suffering, improve human security, and uphold dignity. However, the destruction of ecologically sensitive forests creates irreversible harm to biodiversity, tribal livelihoods, and climate stability.
Thus, while human welfare is important, deforestation in such a fragile zone cannot be ethically justified, as it violates intergenerational justice (John Rawls’ principle of fairness) by compromising the rights of future generations to a healthy environment.
(b) Socio-economic, administrative, and ethical challenges
- Socio-Economic Challenges:
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- Balancing the immediate need for housing with long-term livelihood security of forest-dependent communities.
- Risk of deepening inequality, as tribals may be displaced to accommodate urban poor.
- Potential loss of ecosystem services like soil fertility, water regulation, and medicinal plants, which are crucial for rural economies.
- Administrative Challenges:
- Weak capacity to enforce sustainable land-use planning.
- Coordination gaps between housing, tribal welfare, and forest departments.
- Ensuring rehabilitation of both displaced humans and wildlife amidst growing human–wildlife conflicts.
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- Conflict between rights-based ethics (right to shelter) and duty-based ethics (duty to preserve nature).
- Balancing distributive justice, should the welfare of homeless outweigh the welfare of forest dwellers and biodiversity?
- The temptation of short-term populist gains versus long-term ethical responsibility of stewardship.
Here, Gandhiji’s idea of Sarvodaya (welfare of all) provides guidance: no development should come at the cost of the weakest sections, including voiceless species and tribal communities.
(c) Alternatives and Policy Interventions
- Alternative Land Use: Identify degraded or non-arable land for housing projects rather than ecologically sensitive zones. GIS mapping and land audits can help.
- Vertical Housing Models: Urban and semi-urban expansion through affordable high-rise housing reduces land footprint while ensuring dignity.
- Eco-Sensitive Housing Schemes: Promote eco-friendly building technologies (mud blocks, bamboo, green roofs) that reduce ecological impact.
- Forest-Community Partnerships: Recognise and empower tribal rights under FRA, 2006, and promote eco-tourism and forest-based livelihoods instead of displacement.
- Integrated Policy Approach: A “Housing-with-Conservation” framework that combines PM Awas Yojana with afforestation drives, ensuring compensatory plantations and ecological restoration.
- Law and Order Concerns: Rather than clearing forests, strengthen community policing and surveillance to address anti-social activities without ecological harm.
Conclusion
Human dignity and ecological integrity are inseparable. As Amartya Sen’s Capability Approach stresses, development must expand freedoms without harming future prospects. Hence, inclusive housing that respects both people and nature, guided by Gandhian trusteeship, is the ethical way forward.