In the post-independence era, the term bahujan was introduced into Indian political discourse and given its modern definition by anti-castesocial movements inspired by the work of B. R. Ambedkar and Jyotirao Phule,[5][6] and often associated with Dalit Buddhism. The outlook of these movements is sometimes referred to in English as Bahujanism, and is positioned by its proponents as a majoritarian philosophy demanding social equality for backward castes, religious minorities, and other disadvantaged communities, in opposition to the dominance of the Forward Castes. Similarly, the term bahujanisation has been used to refer to the coalescence of various movements advancing the interests of particular backward castes and communities into a broad united front seeking comprehensive social change.[7]