posted on 2024-09-05, 22:22authored byPritpal Randhawa, Fiona Marshall
This paper explores the complex interactions that occur as formal policies are
interpreted and utilised to develop water management plans in peri-urban Delhi. With
an emphasis on people’s participation in decision-making, the paper examines some
of the disjunctures between formal assumptions about water management in periurban
areas and practices on the ground. In doing so it attempts to reveal some of the
key processes responsible for social fragmentation of services. The paper describes
informal coping strategies adopted by poor and marginalised peri-urban communities
with little or no access to formal provision. Within this, the role of ‘hidden;
interactions with the formal system are highlighted in the context of failures of
formal participatory platforms. The paper argues that enhanced understanding of the
policy process, and the alternative arrangements that emerge in response to its
shortfalls, could be an important contributory factors in identifying realistic
intervention strategies for enhanced, more socially just, water management in periurban
situations.
Funding
ESRC
History
Publisher
Pion (Environment and Planning C)
Citation
Randhawa, Pritpal, and Fiona Marshall. "Policy transformations and translations: lessons for sustainable water management in peri-urban Delhi, India." Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 32.1 (2014): 93-107.