Technomoral Politics

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A01=Aradhana Sharma
activism
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Author_Aradhana Sharma
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JHMC
Category=JP
citizenship
COP=United States
corruption
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democracy
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Good governance
India
Language_English
law
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populism
Price_€20 to €50
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softlaunch
transparency

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517918088
  • Weight: 368g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2024
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Examining anticorruption battles and transparency laws to ask: what makes for good governance, and can it limit liberal democratic politics as much as encourage it?
 

Good governance is meant to empower citizens, increase democratic participation, and make states transparent and accountable, yet this liberal democratic imperative can also promote populist authoritarian rule. Bringing together discourses on ethical goodness with the technicalities of governance as expressed in laws and policies, Aradhana Sharma develops the concept of “technomoral politics” to navigate this fraught topic. With a focus on the work of activists, citizens, and state officials, she offers an ethnographic account of the contradictions and dangers of good-governance politics in twenty-first-century India.

 

A Technomoral Politics follows the evolution of a group of activists in New Delhi led by Arvind Kejriwal from 2008 to 2014 as they morphed from a protransparency NGO to a mass movement against state corruption to a populist party that promised to change the political system through laws and policies. Sharma explores the technomoral framing of state opacity and corruption as well as the limits of the law in resolving these issues, probing such themes as the contradictory relationship between transparency and bureaucracy and the classed and gendered nature of democratic state institutions.

 

By examining scalar dimensions of good-governance politics, from the hyperlocal work of activists to global trends, A Technomoral Politics illuminates the paradoxes, limits, and risks of a system that is meant to spread liberal democratic principles but that also ends up promoting antidemocratic, populist-authoritarian forms of rule.

 

 

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Aradhana Sharma is associate professor of anthropology at Wesleyan University. She is author of Logics of Empowerment: Development, Gender, and Governance in Neoliberal India (Minnesota, 2008).

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