Skip to main content

Jennifer Bussell to speak on Citizens and the State in India

yale world fellows

As part of the South Asia Colloquium Series, Professor Jennifer Bussell will deliver a talk titled �Babu, Barrister, Fixer, or Friend? Intermediaries and citizen-state relations in India�

September 14, 4:30pm � Room 203, Luce Hall, 34 Hillhouse Avenue

Jennifer Bussell is an Assistant Professor in the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas, Austin. Her research focuses on comparative politics, the political economy of development, and South Asia. Her forthcoming book, Corruption and Reform In India: Public Services in the Digital Age (Cambridge University Press), draws on fieldwork in seventeen Indian states, as well a citizen survey and field experiment. Her previous research has appeared in Comparative Political Studies, International Studies Quarterly, Studies in International Development, and is forthcoming in Economic and Political Weekly. She received a PhD in political science from the University of California, Berkeley.

An abstract of Professor Bussell�s talk follows:

How do citizens access the state? While the nature of citizen-state relations is a key element of democracy, most analyses focus on only one element of this interaction, such as the links between citizens and their representatives, the use of an intermediary to facilitate service delivery, or payment of a bribe to a bureaucrat. In this paper, I evaluate the relationship between citizens and the state in India, focusing on the choices citizens make over a range of potential strategies for accessing state resources and the combinations of these strategies. I consider potential demographic, regional, and institutional causes of variation in these choices and find that citizens engage with the state in quite different ways depending on the government department from which they require services and the state in which they live. These analyses highlight the importance of a more comprehensive evaluation of citizen-state interactions that takes into account the spectrum of choices citizens may or may not have for accessing public services, thus providing a more complete view of democratic practice in India today.