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Spaces of Intermediation and Political Participation: a Study of KuSumpur pahadI redevelopment project

Naomi Hazarika

No 16, CSH-IFP Working Papers from Centre de Sciences Humaines, New Delhi

Abstract: With the aim to understand the nature of urban politics and spaces of intermediation in informal settlements in the face of a major infrastructural project in New Delhi, this article is a study of the recent “In-Situ Slum Redevelopment and Rehabilitation Policy in Public-Private Partnership 2019” adopted by the Delhi Development Authority. The first section of the article examines how the policy engages with the contours of state-citizen relations on paper. The second section identifies key actors and networks engaged in the process of mobilization in one of the 32 settlements that are slated to be redeveloped under this policy. I argue that this policy denies an interface between residents and the state during the implementation of a large infrastructural project and, moreover, seeks to ‘formalize’ the mode of political participation for residents of informal settlements to be redeveloped.mean-preserving spread in the skills of two children with the same background be recorded favorably. We apply our criteria to the ranking of education systems of 43 countries, taking the PISA score in mathematics as the measure of cognitive skills and the largest of the two parents International Socio Economic Index as the indicator of background. We show that, albeit incomplete, our criteria enables conclusive comparisons of about 19% of all the possible pairs of countries. Education systems of fast-growing Asian economies – in particular Vietnam – appear at the top of our rankings while those of relatively wealthy Arabic countries such as Lebanon, United Arab Emirates and Jordan are at the bottom. The fraction of countries that can be ranked successfully happens to be only mildly increased as a result of adding elitism to the three other principles.

Keywords: Urban Politics; Urban India; Slum Redevelopment; State-Citizen Relations; Mobilization (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: R23 R31 R38 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 23 pages
Date: 2020-07, Revised 2020-07
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ppm and nep-sea
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Published in the CSH-IFP Working Papers series

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