Risks and Rewards: Three Essays on Political Economy of Indian Democracy During Crises

dc.contributor.advisor

Mohanan, Manoj

dc.contributor.advisor

Wibbels, Erik

dc.contributor.author

Downs-Tepper, Harlan

dc.date.accessioned

2023-03-28T21:41:11Z

dc.date.issued

2022

dc.department

Public Policy

dc.description.abstract

This dissertation investigates how politically-expedient decisions and resource constraints create winners and losers on the path toward development, focusing on slum evictions, public recordkeeping, and public health crisis response. This manuscript extends findings from prior scholarship on the politics and consequences of redistribution to understand decision-making in the context of urban informality and Covid-19 crisis response in India. I combine survey data with webscraping and remote sensing techniques to study why some urban slums were evicted while others were left intact; which areas experienced underreporting of Covid-19 mortality; and where government directed limited Covid-19 vaccine stocks. I find evidence that greater local economic activity was associated with evictions, that Covid-19 mortality counts were lower in areas aligned with the ruling coalition, and that Covid-19 vaccination supplies were strategically directed to areas of electoral importance to the ruling coalition. Taken together, these findings show that, even during crises, electoral incentives shape policy.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26799

dc.subject

Political science

dc.subject

Economics

dc.subject

Clientelism

dc.subject

Global development

dc.subject

Political economy

dc.subject

Remote sensing

dc.subject

Slums

dc.title

Risks and Rewards: Three Essays on Political Economy of Indian Democracy During Crises

dc.type

Dissertation

duke.embargo.months

22

duke.embargo.release

2025-01-27T00:00:00Z

Files

Collections