PRINCETON STUDIES IN POLITICAL BEHAVIOR

About The Book

How poor migrants shape city politics during urbanizationAs the Global South rapidly urbanizes millions of people have migrated from the countryside to urban slums which now house one billion people worldwide. The transformative potential of urbanization hinges on whether and how poor migrants are integrated into city politics. Popular and scholarly accounts paint migrant slums as exhausted by dispossession subdued by local dons bought off by wily politicians or polarized by ethnic appeals. Migrants and Machine Politics shows how slum residents in India routinely defy such portrayals actively constructing and wielding political machine networks to demand important albeit imperfect representation and responsiveness within the countrys expanding cities.Drawing on years of pioneering fieldwork in Indias slums including ethnographic observation interviews surveys and experiments Adam Michael Auerbach and Tariq Thachil reveal how migrants harness forces of political competitionas residents voters community leaders and party workersto sow unexpected seeds of accountability within city politics. This multifaceted agency provokes new questions about how political networks form during urbanization. In answering these questions this book overturns longstanding assumptions about how political machines exploit the urban poor to stifle competition foster ethnic favoritism and entrench vote buying.By documenting how poor migrants actively shape urban politics in counterintuitive ways Migrants and Machine Politics sheds new light on the political consequences of urbanization across India and the Global South.
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