CONTENTS:- Introduction; Urban Governance in India; Evelin Hust; The Framework - Environment, Decentralization, Liberalization and Governmentality; 1. Governing India's Urban Environment: Problems, Policies and Politics; 2. Planning of Indian Mega-Cities: Issues of Governance, the Public Sphere and a Pinch of Civil Society; 3. Women and Urban Development: Do They make a Difference? A Case Study of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi; 4. Slum as Achievement: Governmentality and the Agency of Slum Dwellers; Infrastructure - Technical, Social and Cultural Aspects; 5. Towards an Improved Urban Governance of Public Services: Water Supply and Sanitation; 6. Reflections on Urbanization in Water Infrastructure and Local Discourse in a Town in the Making; 7. Waste and the City: Public Responses to the Problems of Municipal Solid Waste Management in Indian Metropolitan Cities; 8. Pigs and Power: Urban Space and Urban Decay; In Time and Space - Urban Settlement and the State; 9. Planning Urban Chaos: State and Refugees in Post-Partition Delhi; 10. Town-Planing and Urban Resistance in the Old City of Delhi, 1937-77; 11. Urban Villages of Delhi; 12. Residential Practices, Creation and Use of Urban Space: Unauthorized Colonies in Delhi; Note on contributors.
DESCRIPTION
India is rather notorious for its urban problems: Kolkata and the plight of her urban poor has become the epitome for the urban nightmare; Dharavi-slum of Mumbai has the distinction of being the largest in Asia; Delhi has the infamous reputation of being one of the most polluted cities of the world; and much lesser known Surat has entered the public consciousness as the city where a supposedly extinct disease of the middle ages - the plague - had reappeared in 1994. To govern Indian cities seems to be one of the biggest challenges in the twenty-first century. However, governance occurs at various levels and is employed for a limited economic sector as well as for the whole globe. Since this volume deals with urban India, the definition of UN HABITAT will serve as a point departure stating that power exists inside and outside the formal authority and institutions of government. In this way, governance emphasizes 'process' recognizing that all decisions are based on complex relationships between many actors with different priorities. All chapters are informed by the author's specific views on urban problems and urban governance. Yet all chapters contribute to our understanding of urban governance in various ways and read together serve to widen our horizon on this extremely complex issue governance in India.