1st Edition

Reshaping City Governance London, Mumbai, Kolkata, Hyderabad

By Nirmala Rao Copyright 2015
    258 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    258 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    India’s cities are in the midst of an unprecedented urban expansion. While India is acknowledged as a rising power, poised to emerge into the front rank of global economies, the pace and scale of its urbanisation calls for more effective metropolitan management if that growth is not to be constrained by gathering urban crisis.

    This book addresses some key issues of governance and management for India’s principal urban areas of Mumbai, Kolkata and Hyderabad. As three of the greatest Indian cities, they have evolved in recent decades into large metropolitan regions with complex, overlapping and often haphazard governance arrangements. All three cities exemplify the challenges of urbanisation and serve here as case studies to explore the five dimensions of urban governance in terms of devolution, planning, structures of delivery, urban leadership and civic participation. London, with its recent establishment of a directly elected Mayor, provides a reference point for this analysis, and signifies the extent to which urban leadership has moved to the top of the urban governance agenda. In arguing the case for reform of metropolitan governance, the book demonstrates that it would be too simplistic to imagine that London’s institutional structure can be readily transposed on to the very different political and cultural fabric of India’s urban life.

    Confronting India’s urban crisis with a comparative analysis that identifies the limits of policy transfer, the book will be particularly valuable to students and scholars of Politics, Governance, and Urban studies.

    1. Urban governance in India

    2. The conditions of effective metropolitan governance

    3. London: A prototype for India?

    4. Devolution of power to cities

    5. The reach of metropolitan power

    6. The structures of metropolitan authority

    7. Urban leadership and civic engagement

    8. The future of India’s urban governance

    Biography

    Nirmala Rao is Professor of Politics and Pro-Director at SOAS, University of London, UK. She has published extensively in the field of urban governance and her other publications include Cities in Transition: Growth and Change in Six Metropolitan Areas (Routledge) and Governing London (with Ben Pimlott).

    Based on this conceptual foundation, the remaining chapters focus on the selected capital cities in terms of decision making within the context of devolution, relationships across urban intergovernmental structures, organizational approaches to address basic infrastructure needs, and the concentration of power within the metropolitan leadership. - E. Wohlers, Cameron University