
Aruna Roy
Indian social activist and co-founder of Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
59/100
Raw Score
49/85
Confidence
70%
Evidence
Medium
About
Roy's public record is unusually strong on turning solidarity with poor rural workers into durable civic tools: public hearings, social audits, and the Right to Information movement. The main caution is not corruption or personal enrichment, but that her belief and worship life are not publicly documented enough for high-confidence spiritual scoring.
The observable record points to strong social-care, integrity, and resilience alignment. She repeatedly left status, proximity to power, and easier forms of influence in order to stay close to poor constituencies, but the profile remains under review because key belief and worship dimensions are only lightly observable in public evidence.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Roy's strongest observable alignment is outward-facing: sustained service to poor workers, democratic accountability, and perseverance under pressure. The profile is pulled down mainly by limited public visibility into private creed and worship, not by strong evidence of exploitation or self-serving conduct.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public moral accountability language is visible, but explicit theistic self-disclosure is limited.
Her record shows accountability-centered ethics more clearly than explicit eschatological language.
Long-horizon moral discipline is visible, but spiritual foundations are only lightly documented.
No strong public evidence of scripture-guided self-description was found.
No strong public evidence of prophetic-model language was found.
Contribution to Others
Public record is centered on broader civic service rather than family-specific care.
Her rights-based work benefits vulnerable younger people, though not mainly through orphan-focused institutions.
This is the strongest dimension in the public record across wages, work rights, and transparency.
Her organizing method widened access for marginalized people beyond her immediate circles.
MKSS public-hearing and grievance structures were built around listening to direct claims from affected people.
RTI and social audits helped people challenge arbitrary power and information asymmetry.
Personal Discipline
No reliable public documentation of regular prayer practice was found.
Her service ethos is strong, but structured personal charity evidence is limited.
Reliability
She repeatedly matched public commitments to long-duration accountability work and accepted costs for dissent.
Stability Under Pressure
Long village-based movement work suggests durable endurance under material constraint.
Her record shows sustained perseverance across decades of unpopular and difficult public work.
She maintained nonviolent public argument through state resistance and movement-level conflict.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Left the Indian Administrative Service for grassroots social work
Roy left the Indian Administrative Service after concluding it did not let her help ordinary people as directly as she believed was necessary, and moved into rural development work in Rajasthan.
→ Marked a durable shift away from elite state power toward public-facing service and long-horizon movement work.
mediumCo-founded Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan with villagers in Rajasthan
Roy, Shankar Singh, Nikhil Dey, and local villagers built MKSS as a grassroots organization to fight wage theft, corruption, and exclusion faced by workers and peasants.
→ Created the base institution through which minimum-wage, social-audit, and transparency campaigns were organized.
highHelped launch public hearings that exposed wage fraud and forged records
MKSS organized early jan sunwais that read government records aloud in public and let villagers verify them, exposing fake muster rolls and misuse of funds.
→ Converted abstract transparency into a practical community tool and laid groundwork for social audits and RTI demands.
highSustained the Rajasthan right-to-information struggle through a long Jaipur protest
Roy and MKSS helped lead rallies culminating in a 53-day protest in Jaipur to force the state government to open development-fund records to the public.
→ The campaign pushed transparency from local protest into a wider state and national political demand.
highCampaign work helped culminate in the Right to Information Act
After years of public-hearing, disclosure, and accountability campaigning, Roy was widely credited as one of the movement figures behind India's landmark Right to Information Act. MKSS's practices also fed into social-audit and rural-employment rights work.
→ Produced a durable legal mechanism for transparency and accountability with nationwide civic use.
highBroke with dominant civil-society sentiment over Lokpal design
During the anti-corruption upsurge around Anna Hazare, Roy argued that public debate mattered and warned against treating one draft Lokpal model as beyond criticism, drawing attacks from some fellow activists.
→ Cost her popularity with parts of the movement but showed a pattern of preferring deliberative accountability over charismatic shortcuts.
mediumQuit the National Advisory Council citing drift from poor constituencies
Roy left the NAC and publicly criticized the weakening of RTI protections, delays in food security lawmaking, and refusal to back minimum wages under MGNREGS, saying she needed to return to full public action with poor communities.
→ Reinforced a visible pattern of stepping away from proximity to power when she believed it was diluting accountability commitments.
mediumBBC 100 Women recognition highlighted four decades of rights-based activism
BBC included Roy in its 2024 100 Women list, describing her as a campaigner for the rights of the poor who left civil service to work directly with rural communities and help win accountability law.
→ Served as late-stage confirmation that her public reputation still rests on sustained rights work rather than celebrity alone.
lowPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Rajasthan transparency struggle
1996Officials resisted record disclosure and activists had to sustain a long Jaipur protest to force openness.
Response: Roy stayed with a long, nonviolent, document-based campaign rather than abandoning the effort or reducing it to rhetoric.
positiveLokpal movement split
2011Popular anti-corruption mobilization hardened around one bill design and dissenters faced public pressure.
Response: Roy kept arguing for debate, listening, and narrower institutional design despite loss of goodwill from some activists.
mixed_positiveExit from National Advisory Council
2013She judged the advisory route to be drifting away from poor communities and key accountability commitments.
Response: Roy left the platform and returned to full public action instead of defending access for its own sake.
positiveProgression
crisis years
High-pressure fights over transparency law, anti-corruption institutional design, and the limits of advisory power.
testedcurrent stage
Late-career public witness and movement memory-keeping, with continued emphasis on democracy, RTI, and the poor.
steadyearly years
Education, civil-service entry, and early exposure to state machinery.
forminggrowth years
Grassroots immersion in Rajasthan followed by institution-building through MKSS and public-hearing practices.
upwardBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Turns local wage and record disputes into reusable public accountability methods.
- • Keeps returning to constituencies of workers and villagers rather than staying in metropolitan advisory roles.
- • Defends democratic process even when doing so is unpopular inside allied movements.
Concerns
- • Public evidence of explicit religious discipline is sparse.
- • Critics argue her advisory role in the NAC blurred lines between movement accountability and unelected policy influence.
Evidence Quality
7
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: medium
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.