Changing Infrastructure in Urban India: Critical Reflections on Openness and Trust in the Governance of Public Services

D. Sadoway, Satyarupa Shekhar
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Abstract

Cities in India are in a state of flux characterized by rapid changes in population, land use, and infrastructural arrangements. With approximately 68 percent of its nearly 1.21 billion residents still living in rural communities (Census of India 2011a), the relatively recent rapid growth in India’s cities has exerted severe pressure on local governments to better supply public services. Indian cities can be understood as vast provisioning machines (Amin 2014) that provide services and infrastructure for sustaining the lives of their citizens (figure 6.1). In this critical reflection, we discuss how questions about open systems and trust— elaborated on in the theoretical work of Rao et al. (chapter 3, this volume)— relate to the provision of urban services and infrastructure. Internationally, a variety of open practices and systems demonstrate apparent promise for improving urban public service delivery. For example, governments and civil society groups have created open platforms and have crowdsourced citizens’ input on diverse issues linked to local service or infrastructure needs (Hagen 2011). Our research— drawing on perspectives of both local government and civil society intermediaries— provides insight into public service and infrastructure issues in a rapidly changing city in India, as well as theoretical reflections for advocates and theorists of open systems. We link our study to a critique of Rao et al.’s operating theory, discussed in chapter 3 of this volume, about trust (or trustworthiness) in combination with open systems (or openness), and we apply this to questions about the provision of public services and infrastructure in Chennai, India. Rao et al. (chapter 3, this volume) have introduced a trust model that applies to open systems in a 6 Changing Infrastructure in Urban India: Critical Reflections on Openness and Trust in the Governance of Public Services
印度城市基础设施的变化:对公共服务治理中的开放性和信任的批判性思考
印度的城市处于不断变化的状态,其特点是人口、土地利用和基础设施安排的迅速变化。印度近12.1亿居民中约68%仍生活在农村社区(印度2011年人口普查),印度城市近年来的快速增长给地方政府带来了巨大压力,要求它们更好地提供公共服务。印度城市可以被理解为巨大的供应机器(Amin 2014),为维持其公民的生活提供服务和基础设施(图6.1)。在这一批判性反思中,我们讨论了关于开放系统和信任的问题——Rao等人的理论工作(本卷第3章)详细阐述了这些问题——如何与城市服务和基础设施的提供相关。在国际上,各种开放的做法和系统显示出改善城市公共服务提供的明显希望。例如,政府和民间社会团体创建了开放平台,并将公民的意见众包到与当地服务或基础设施需求相关的各种问题上(Hagen 2011)。我们的研究借鉴了地方政府和民间社会中介机构的观点,为快速变化的印度城市中的公共服务和基础设施问题提供了见解,也为开放系统的倡导者和理论家提供了理论反思。我们将我们的研究与Rao等人在本卷第3章中讨论的关于信任(或可信赖)与开放系统(或开放性)相结合的运营理论的批评联系起来,并将其应用于有关印度钦奈提供公共服务和基础设施的问题。Rao等人(本卷第3章)介绍了一种信任模型,该模型适用于印度城市基础设施变化中的开放系统:对公共服务治理中的开放性和信任的关键反思
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