Caste and the City: Intersections of Recent Economic Reforms and Dalit Politics in Lucknow
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Abstract:
The research attempts to understand the political economy of caste in Lucknow city. It is an
ethnographic study of two Dalit-dominated neighbourhoods in the wake of the implementation of
demonetisation in November 2016 and GST (Goods and Services Tax) in July 2017, which
severely affected the life and labour of people working in the informal economy. Through the
narratives of the residents, this thesis attempts to understand how Dalits continue to have limited
occupational opportunities in urban areas. These opportunities continue to be guided by a
structurally discriminating regime that has historically conditioned the social and political relations
in the country. The thesis, at the intersection of caste and gender, explores how structural
inequalities manifest in the everyday lives of Dalits and how the caste system reproduces and
reconfigures itself in urban areas.
The thesis argues that urban space produces specific conditions that often recreate rather
than dissolve traditional caste relations and reproduce the dominant hierarchal order. Urban space
is a key element in replicating power structures and producing differential experiences based on
an individual’s or community’s social location. The persistence of caste inequalities in urban areas
is often not acknowledged and is dismissed or homogenised as a ‘class problem’. This thesis
intervenes in the scholarly discussions around caste and urban inequality to show the distinct ways
caste mediates the impact of economic policies in two neighbourhoods of Lucknow. I argue that
my findings in these two neighbourhoods give a sense of structural inequalities and caste
contradictions in contemporary urban India.