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ID128526
Title ProperWhat has urban decentralization meant
Other Title Informationa case study of Delhi
LanguageENG
AuthorMehra, Diya
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since 2000 in New Delhi, urban decentralization has mainly come in the form of the highly visible Bhagidari or partnership scheme, inviting city residents to participate in a "process of dialogue and the discovery of joint-solutions." This paper critically examines this program between 2000 and 2012, through the experiences of primarily middle-class neighbourhood organizations (called Resident Welfare Associations, or RWAs) that were included in the scheme. The paper argues that rather than constitutional decentralization, Bhagidari as an initiative must be read in terms of a larger shift to entrepreneurial governance. Bhagidari's success has been in delegating management to voluntary middle-class neighbourhood associations called RWAs, at little cost to city government, while seemingly opening up a "participatory" space for middle-class urban issue image_86_4_Decentralized Delhi_Mehraresidents in civic affairs. However, the article argues that Bhagidari's impact has come to represent an attempt at harnessing and managing the new middle-class aspiration to engage with urban government for administrative and political ends. In this context, Bhagidari has also been seen as an important means of cultivating middle-class consent and a constituency through courting RWAs for an ambitious chief executive. Over time, this has become a common strategy for building political and civic visibility for a range of actors, and thus the number of RWAs has proliferated
`In' analytical NotePacific Affairs Vol.86, No.4; December 2013: p.813-834
Journal SourcePacific Affairs Vol.86, No.4; December 2013: p.813-834
Key WordsUrbanization ;  Land Conversion ;  Land Conflicts ;  Cooperatives ;  Urban Development ;  Economic Development ;  Contemporary Challenges ;  Delhi ;  New Delhi ;  India ;  Common Strategy ;  Political Visibility ;  Civil Affairs