This research critically engages with existing theories of class and urban governance, and is empirically located in Delhi, India. The paper argues that existing theories of urban participatory governance in the global South, which polarise urban citizens and their mobilisation strategies into the elite, typically understood as guilty of 'capturing' participatory structures; and the poor, conceptualised as excluded from formal governance mechanisms but active in more politicised forms of mobilisation, are incomplete. This research identifies urban citizens who fit neither the 'elite' nor 'poor' conceptual binary, and explores how such 'ordinary' citizens engage in participatory urban governance. Empirically, research addresses Delhi's unauthorised colonies (UCs), residential areas that have evolved mostly on private land that is not classified 'residential' in the Delhi Master Plan. Housing roughly a quarter to one-third of Delhi's population and comprising a mix of classes, UCs are technically illegal locations for residential development, are consequently excluded from Delhi's network of basic urban services (water, roads, electricity) and face potential demolition. UCs are conceptualised as representing India's 'missing middle' both empirically, highlighting the multiplicity of the middle class, and conceptually, revealing the failure of binary concepts to accurately describe participatory urban governance for those in 'the middle'. In addition, analysis highlights how UCs' invisibility (linked to their heterogeneity -i.e. their empirical and conceptual 'middle-ness') functions as both an asset and a limitation in terms of participation in urban governance. The paper calls for greater recognition in academic and policy debates regarding the nuances in everyday life that are overlooked by neat binaries. As the Delhi case shows, a large proportion of urban populations are neither 'poor' nor 'elite', and arguably a similar trend is likely to exist in cities throughout the world where segments of populations demographically in 'the middle' are 'missing' from academic and policy debates.
This paper considers how changes in urban governance in Delhi over the last two decades have influenced the provision of health care services. It begins by describing the introduction of, or return to, elected governments for the National Capital Territory of Delhi and for the Municipal Corporation of Delhi. It then discusses public health care, which in effect serves low-income groups as most higher-income groups now use private services, and how this has changed, drawing on interviews and direct observations of elected representatives and officials at state and municipal levels, political cadres, NGOs, members of residential welfare associations and public health care users. The research focused on four municipal wards that included a middle-class area, a mixed-income area, a ward where many slum communities had been relocated and an "urban village". The research also included an analysis of the priority given to health care issues (and what those issues are) in the Legislative Assembly and in the Municipal Health Department and Municipal Health Committee. The paper suggests that the opening by state government of new invited spaces for resident welfare associations meant that the elected members of the Legislative Assembly and of the municipal government were by-passed. It increased the influence of resident welfare associations, but these are a feature of middle-class areas whose inhabitants use private health care. It avoided contestation, as the state could decide who was invited. The role of NGOs as advocates for the urban poor also diminished, as many were drawn into becoming implementers of government programmes. In effect, this increase in participation can be seen as a new form of centralization, strengthening the position of senior bureaucrats and by-passing the elected politicians.KEYWORDS decentralization / Delhi / health care / neighbourhood associations / NGOs / participation / urban governance I. INTRODUCTIONThis paper considers the provision of public health care services as a case study of the changes brought about in urban governance in India in the past 20 years, with a focus on Delhi. Since the early 1990s, economic liberalization, politico-administrative decentralization and the large consensus around the desirability of "good governance" as defined by the World Bank(1) have doubtlessly transformed urban governance. Recent studies suggest that one of the characteristic features of the contemporary management of urban affairs is the multiplication of actors involved in it.(2) This evolution is particularly striking in Delhi, whose Chief Minister since 1998, Sheila Dixit, has paid special attention to governance issues. It is difficult, however, to distinguish a pattern behind the series of reforms, policies and schemes that have been announced and implemented in quick Stéphanie Tawa LamaRewal is a Research Fellow
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