Dr Nirmal Minz and Padma Shri Dr Ram Dayal Munda—two first-generation Adivasi intellectuals—accelerated the Adivasi discourse in the face of the onslaught of development, from various national and international fora in the post-development era. In his numerous writings, Minz passionately raised the issues of identity, deprivation, dispossession, complete disregard of the Adivasi self-governance model, and issue of survival, etc. Munda’s culture-based reclamation emphasised self-reliance from the perspective of self-governance. Dr B D Sharma, on the other hand, based on his first-hand experience as a collector in Bastar, overcame the possible biases of a diku as he interacted with Adivasis in various areas of erstwhile Madhya Pradesh, and raised and published a systematic critique of the policies and outcomes of various Commissions from his perspective of ‘Unbroken History of the Broken People’. Identity, a descriptor, is not only perception-based or interpretation of survey data, such as terms mostly used in academic writings have certain paternalistic and pejorative connotations, but it also includes indices such as relationship with land, language, culture, art, philosophy, etc., which were the inheritance, systematically transferred down the generations, and have thus survived for thousands of years in the small world of limited needs and plentiful resources.