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5 - Intra-party Competition and Local Democracy in the Indian States: A Statistical Analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2015

Anjali Thomas Bohlken
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
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Summary

India provides an excellent laboratory within which to address the question of why and when governments choose to bring about democratic change at the local level. This is because, as described in Chapter 3, the decision of whether to establish or to maintain elected government at the village level has been largely left in the hands of Indian state governments. This feature of the Indian context makes it possible to examine the variation in the implementation of local democratization within the same national context across space and time. Explaining this variation provides a unique opportunity to understand the causes of local democracy while holding several confounding factors constant.

There have been considerable differences across state governments in India in the degree to which they have established and strengthened democratic institutions at the local level. Some state governments have taken significant steps to establish robust democratic institutions at the local level and to devolve significant resources and powers to them. In these states, local democratic institutions or panchayats have played an important role in improving development and increasing citizen satisfaction (e.g. Heller, Harilal, and Chaudhuri 2007; Bardhan and Mookherjee 2006b). Other state governments in India have failed even in the basic task of holding regular elections to bodies at the local level, some even despite the compelling pressures of the 1993 national constitutional amendments described in Chapter 4. These state governments have chosen instead to let these bodies function for years without an electoral mandate or to suspend these bodies and have their functions taken over by unelected administrators.

I argue that the differences in the behavior of state governments toward local democratic institutions can be explained in large part by the degree to which the state chief executive – the chief minister – faced competition within the party for control over its key organizational networks. Based on the discussion in Chapter 3, I contend that chief ministers in India tend to face greaterintra-party competition when at least one or more of the following conditions hold: (1) the party organization has existed for a relatively long period under the leadership of individuals other than the current chief minister and (2) the ruling party is divided with an experienced leader at the helm of the organizational wing.

Type
Chapter
Information
Democratization from Above
The Logic of Local Democracy in the Developing World
, pp. 121 - 162
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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