
Syllabus: GS1/Indian Culture & Heritage; Conservation
Context
- India’s heritage protection regime is over-centralised, uniform, and counterproductive, often failing both conservation and development objectives.
- Rigid buffer-zone approaches, weak enforcement, and lack of contextual planning undermine heritage management and urban growth simultaneously.
About India’s Heritage Protection Regime
- Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (AMASR) Act, 1958 aims to protect and preserve ancient monuments and archaeological sites, to regulate excavations and antiquities, and to prevent encroachment and damage to heritage structures.
- It is implemented mainly through the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) under the Ministry of Culture.
- It oversees about 3,700 centrally protected monuments.
Key Features of AMASR Act, 1958
- Definition of Ancient Monuments: Structures or remains over 100 years old, that includes temples, mosques, forts, tombs; and caves, inscriptions, sculptures.
- Declaration of National Importance: Central Government can declare sites as ‘Monuments of National Importance’, that come under ASI protection.
- Protection & Maintenance: ASI is responsible for conservation; repair and maintenance; and regulation of public access.
- Regulation of Excavations: Excavation allowed only with government permission, aimed to prevent illegal digging and trafficking of antiquities.
- Control over Construction Activities: It was strengthened after the 2010 amendment to the Act.
- Prohibited Area (0–100 metres around monument): No construction allowed;
- Regulated Area (100–200 metres): Construction allowed only with permission;
AMASR Amendment Act, 2010 (Key Changes)
- Creation of National Monuments Authority (NMA): Regulates construction in prohibited/regulated areas; and grants permissions
- Heritage Bye-laws: Site-specific regulations for each monument
- Stricter Penalties: For illegal construction and encroachment
- Clear Demarcation of Zones: Formalised 100 m and 200 m rule
Why India Needs a Stronger & Reformed Heritage Protection Regime?
- Ineffective Conservation Outcomes: Many monuments remain poorly maintained and encroached upon, despite legal protection.
- Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) faces capacity constraints and resource shortages, limiting effective monitoring.
- Issues of encroachment, vandalism, and neglect, showing that legal protection is not the actual preservation.
- Outdated and Rigid Legal Framework: AMASR Act, 1958 imposes uniform buffer zones irrespective of monument significance.
- It treats all monuments equally despite vast differences in historical, cultural, and tourism value, and lacks context-sensitive and scientific planning.
- It leads to both over-regulation and under-protection simultaneously.
- Conflict with Urban Development: Infrastructure projects (metro, hospitals, Smart Cities) face delays due to heritage clearances, and large urban land parcels remain economically unutilised.
- Initiatives like Smart Cities Mission and AMRUT require better integration with heritage laws.
- Underutilisation of Tourism Potential: India’s heritage sites contribute less to tourism revenue compared to global standards.
- Lack of visitor amenities and local economic integration.
- Governance and Institutional Challenges: Multiple agencies (ASI, State Departments, NMA) have overlapping jurisdictions, delaying approvals (2–5 years in many cases).
- It highlights the need for administrative simplification and decentralisation.
- Lack of Community Participation: Current regime is top-down, ignoring local stakeholders; and global best practices stress community-led conservation.
- Need to Align with Global Standards: UNESCO promotes Historic Urban Landscape (HUL) approach, and India’s framework still follows colonial-era preservation mindset.
Policy Reforms: Way Forward
- Rationalisation of Protected List: Shift low-significance sites to state and or local governance.
- Graded Protection Framework: Tier-based regulation, as strict control for high value (UNESCO), and flexible norms for others.
- Replace Blanket Bans with Smart Regulation: There is a need to allow case-specific development controls, and focus on visual integrity, structural safety.
- Integrate Heritage with Urban Planning: Adopt HUL approach of UNESCO, and promote heritage-led urban regeneration.
- Boost Heritage Economy: There is a need to enable cultural tourism, local businesses; and PPP models.
Conclusion
- India’s current heritage protection model is broad but blunt, prioritising rigid restrictions over effective conservation.
- Evidence suggests that over-regulation without contextual planning leads to both heritage degradation and economic inefficiency.
- A shift toward flexible, evidence-based, and economically integrated heritage management can transform monuments from regulatory burdens into drivers of cultural pride and economic growth.
| Daily Mains Practice Question [Q] Critically examine the limitations of India’s heritage protection framework and suggest reforms. |
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