‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India

Street vendors have often been seen as archetypal examples of informality in cities—constituting what Chatterjee (2004), for instance, has called political society—indispensable to the city, but continually having to negotiate the law, their claims to citizenship perpetually tenuous. Using Chatterje...

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Main Author: Kunal Joshi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Urban Research 2018-02-01
Series:Articulo: Journal of Urban Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/articulo/3383
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spelling doaj-5c2efc0651ec4289aa0154d520e458972021-04-08T20:03:39ZengJournal of Urban ResearchArticulo: Journal of Urban Research1661-49412018-02-011710.4000/articulo.3383‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary IndiaKunal JoshiStreet vendors have often been seen as archetypal examples of informality in cities—constituting what Chatterjee (2004), for instance, has called political society—indispensable to the city, but continually having to negotiate the law, their claims to citizenship perpetually tenuous. Using Chatterjee’s framework as a guide, I look at how the movement for street vendors’ rights has evolved in India over the last few decades. I have studied the legal as well as political struggle waged by various street vendors’ groups over the last decade, which eventually culminated in a national law legalizing street vending in India in 2014. That this law was passed amid increasingly strong aspirations for (hawker-free) 'world-class' cities on the part of the middle class is in itself significant, but shows, more importantly, how the Indian street vendor, far from seeking exceptions to the law, is increasingly demanding to be let in to the governmental gaze of the state. Although there have been many problems with the implementation of the bill since its passage, I argue that by institutionalizing a right to vend, the campaign which led to the bill has created new possibilities for vendors to negotiate with the state at all levels.http://journals.openedition.org/articulo/3383hawkersinformalityright to the citysocial rightspolitical societyjudiciary
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kunal Joshi
spellingShingle Kunal Joshi
‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India
Articulo: Journal of Urban Research
hawkers
informality
right to the city
social rights
political society
judiciary
author_facet Kunal Joshi
author_sort Kunal Joshi
title ‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India
title_short ‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India
title_full ‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India
title_fullStr ‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India
title_full_unstemmed ‘Conditional’ Citizens? Hawkers in the Streets (and the Courts) of Contemporary India
title_sort ‘conditional’ citizens? hawkers in the streets (and the courts) of contemporary india
publisher Journal of Urban Research
series Articulo: Journal of Urban Research
issn 1661-4941
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Street vendors have often been seen as archetypal examples of informality in cities—constituting what Chatterjee (2004), for instance, has called political society—indispensable to the city, but continually having to negotiate the law, their claims to citizenship perpetually tenuous. Using Chatterjee’s framework as a guide, I look at how the movement for street vendors’ rights has evolved in India over the last few decades. I have studied the legal as well as political struggle waged by various street vendors’ groups over the last decade, which eventually culminated in a national law legalizing street vending in India in 2014. That this law was passed amid increasingly strong aspirations for (hawker-free) 'world-class' cities on the part of the middle class is in itself significant, but shows, more importantly, how the Indian street vendor, far from seeking exceptions to the law, is increasingly demanding to be let in to the governmental gaze of the state. Although there have been many problems with the implementation of the bill since its passage, I argue that by institutionalizing a right to vend, the campaign which led to the bill has created new possibilities for vendors to negotiate with the state at all levels.
topic hawkers
informality
right to the city
social rights
political society
judiciary
url http://journals.openedition.org/articulo/3383
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