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Main Author: Kumar, Alok
Format: Recurso digital
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2025
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17618558
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author Kumar, Alok
author_facet Kumar, Alok
contents <p><span>Unemployment in rural India has transcended its status as a mere economic issue; it has developed into a significant social, cultural, and psychological challenge that impacts the core of rural society. Even though there have been many development projects, Five-Year Plans, and programs that guarantee jobs since Independence, the problem of finding long-term, fair job opportunities in the countryside is still there. The youth, regarded as the most dynamic and transformative segment of society, are ensnared in frustration, disillusionment, migration, and social deviation due to the lack of stable livelihoods.</span></p> <p><span>This paper is a theoretical sociological examination that aims to analyse the issues of rural unemployment and youth discontent through the lenses of classical theorists, including Karl Marx, Émile Durkheim, and Robert K. Merton. The research contends that unemployment is not solely a consequence of economic disparity; instead, it arises from structural inequalities, the erosion of conventional value systems, and the inadequate adaptation to modernity.</span></p> <p><span>The most recent data show that the overall unemployment rate in India's rural areas was 4.9% (June 2025, CMIE) and the unemployment rate for young people in rural areas was 10.2% (PLFS 2023-24). The rate is even higher for educated young people in rural areas, at about 20%. This shows that the gap between education and employment is getting bigger. This situation shows that rural communities are becoming more hopeless, moving away, and having social unrest.</span></p> <p><span>The study finds that economic policies alone cannot solve the problems of unemployment and youth discontent. Instead, a sociological approach is needed, one that focusses on changing social institutions, values, and community systems to bring stability and</span></p> <p><span>meaning back to rural life.</span></p>
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spellingShingle A Sociological Examination of Rural Unemployment and Youth Dissatisfaction: A Theoretical Inquiry in the Indian Context
Kumar, Alok
Sociology
Rural unemployment
youth discontent
sociological theory
anomie
alienation
strain theory
social change
rural India
structural inequality
<p><span>Unemployment in rural India has transcended its status as a mere economic issue; it has developed into a significant social, cultural, and psychological challenge that impacts the core of rural society. Even though there have been many development projects, Five-Year Plans, and programs that guarantee jobs since Independence, the problem of finding long-term, fair job opportunities in the countryside is still there. The youth, regarded as the most dynamic and transformative segment of society, are ensnared in frustration, disillusionment, migration, and social deviation due to the lack of stable livelihoods.</span></p> <p><span>This paper is a theoretical sociological examination that aims to analyse the issues of rural unemployment and youth discontent through the lenses of classical theorists, including Karl Marx, Émile Durkheim, and Robert K. Merton. The research contends that unemployment is not solely a consequence of economic disparity; instead, it arises from structural inequalities, the erosion of conventional value systems, and the inadequate adaptation to modernity.</span></p> <p><span>The most recent data show that the overall unemployment rate in India's rural areas was 4.9% (June 2025, CMIE) and the unemployment rate for young people in rural areas was 10.2% (PLFS 2023-24). The rate is even higher for educated young people in rural areas, at about 20%. This shows that the gap between education and employment is getting bigger. This situation shows that rural communities are becoming more hopeless, moving away, and having social unrest.</span></p> <p><span>The study finds that economic policies alone cannot solve the problems of unemployment and youth discontent. Instead, a sociological approach is needed, one that focusses on changing social institutions, values, and community systems to bring stability and</span></p> <p><span>meaning back to rural life.</span></p>
title A Sociological Examination of Rural Unemployment and Youth Dissatisfaction: A Theoretical Inquiry in the Indian Context
topic Sociology
Rural unemployment
youth discontent
sociological theory
anomie
alienation
strain theory
social change
rural India
structural inequality
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17618558