June 30 2015
The stark inequality within Indian cities
Dalits are segregated, and have unequal access to public goods in India’s biggest cities
Pranav Sidhwani
Calling the Indian village a ‘den of iniquity’, the
founding father of India’s constitution, B.R. Ambedkar, exhorted Dalits
to migrate from villages to cities to escape the shackles of caste.
Ambedkar’s view continues to influence the dominant narrative on caste
in India.
In the popular imagination, caste is the key marker of identity only
in villages. In contrast, cities are often seen as sites of
emancipation, where even the lowest in the caste ladder has better
access to public goods, and greater opportunities in life. Much of this
is been based on anecdotal evidence, and has rarely been backed by
empirical research.
An analysis
of the latest ward level census data for the 10 most populous cities in
India shows that we may need to rethink how we view cities. Most of
these cities display a high level of residential segregation, with
scheduled castes (SCs) and scheduled tribes (STs) concentrated in a few
areas of the city. Further, access to public goods such as tap water is
much lower in these places.
Focussing on wards with an unusually high proportion of
SC/STs relative to the city (outlier Census wards), and analysing the
level of access to in-house water, a basic public good, and in-house
toilets, a basic private good, a stark picture emerges, as the chart
below shows.
In the 10 cities analyzed, these “extreme” wards have at
least twice the proportion of SC/STs compared to the city average.
Moreover, in all cities barring Delhi, these “extreme” wards do worse in
terms of household access to in-house water and in-house toilets.
Kolkata merits special mention. Out of a total of 141
wards in the city, with SC/STs making up 5.6% of the total population,
it is only in 12 of these wards that more than 40% of the city’s SC/ST
population resides in. These wards do significantly worse than average
in terms of household access to in-house water, with 43% of households
of these wards without water supply in their homes, as compared to 27%
of households overall in the city. Even a naïve study of the politics of
the city would lead one to expect a different outcome. This finding
merits a deeper study of the dynamics at play in the city.
Urban sociologist Robert E. Park noted in 1926 that
social relations are inevitably correlated with spatial relations. His
insight has driven almost all studies of residential segregation. While
there are many studies on segregation of the black community in the US,
comparable studies for Dalits and tribals in India are rarer.
As India urbanises, we need to understand that Indian
cities are not just spaces for buildings, streets and offices. The city
is a space for dispute, citizenship and politics. Cities can offer
residents an opportunity to take part in the resources of the city or
can restrict the same. The choices that we make would determine whether
we would end up with a more inclusive city, as Ambedkar envisioned, or
an exclusive, unequal city.
Pranav Sidhwani is with the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi