posted on 2024-09-05, 23:14authored byNaila Kabeer, Ariful Haq Kabir
The complex nature of the challenge posed by state–society relations to the
realisation of citizenship rights in the poorer countries of the world reflects the
incapacity or unwillingness on the part of the state to guarantee basic security of
life and livelihoods to its citizens and its proneness to capture by powerful elites
that perpetuate this state of affairs. Consequently, access to resources continue to
be defined by position within an unequal social order that is largely constituted by
the ascribed relationships of family, kinship, caste and so on. These relationships
pervade all spheres of society, rendering irrelevant the idea of an impersonal
public sphere which individuals enter as bearers of rights, equal in the eyes of the
law. Indeed, given their reliance on patron client relations for their basic survival
and security, the idea of individual rights is unlikely to have much meaning or
relevance in the lives of most poor people.
This paper explores the hypothesis that the possibility of belonging to alternative
associations whose membership is not ‘given’ by position in the social order holds
out the greatest promise for democratising the social order. Bangladesh offers an
interesting context in which to explore this hypothesis because while it embodies
most the problems of bad governance outlined above, it also has a large number
of civil society organisations, many of whom work primarily with the poorer
sections of society. The research focused on the working poor who are most likely
to belong to these associations. Analysis of their narratives about their lives and
livelihood and their views about rights and social justice suggests, not surprisingly,
that there is nothing inherently democratic about civil society organisations in
Bangladesh, even those ostensibly oriented to the interests of poor people. What
appeared to explain the extent to which organisations were able to achieve
democratic outcomes appeared to depend, first of all, on the extent of their
commitment to the promotion of citizenship rights among poor people and
secondly, on the extent to which they were able to carry out their commitments
without interference from the state. In the context of Bangladesh, the state
appeared to be far more pro-poor in rural than in urban areas.
Keywords: citizenship; working poor; economic rights; civil society.
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Kabeer, N. (2009) Citizenship narratives in the absence of good governance : voices of the working poor in Bangladesh. Working paper series, 331. Brighton: IDS.