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Event details

Nov
10

A Call for Empowering Frontline Workers and Leaders to Increase State Capacity in India: Ethnographic Study of Education Reform in Delhi

  • Forum/Panel Discussion,
  • Academics & Research,
  • Cultural,
  • Service & Civic Engagement,
  • Humanities,
  • Government Affairs,
  • South Asian Studies
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The voices of India’s frontline bureaucrats—teachers, health workers, district and block level administrators - charged with delivering a vast array of public services to citizens—are dismissed all too quickly. Public debates generally view them as corrupt, apathetic, incompetent and in urgent need of tighter monitoring and discipling. But is there another way to view their role, and thus reframe approaches to the challenge of building high-performing public sector organisations and improving State capacity in India?

This talk draws on an ethnographic study of an ambitious effort to improve the quality of government schools, particularly their ability to equip students with foundational literacy and numeracy skills in the city state of Delhi, India. This account of Delhi's efforts to reform schools trains its focus on voices at the frontlines of the public school system. In so doing it captures the complex ways in which bureaucratic hierarchies, processes and belief systems shape state capacity. The culture these created determine not just degrees of state capacity but also how public sector organisations resist, distort and eventually adopt reform ideas and actions aimed at improving performance. Understanding, engaging and empowering the frontlines rather than disciplining them through the power hierarchies of the bureaucratic system lies at the heart of how state capacity is built and sustained.

Speakers

Yamini Aiyar, Former President and Chief Executive of the Centre for Policy Research (CPR), Visiting Senior Fellow at the Saxena Center for Contemporary South Asia, Brown University

Tanushree Goyal, Assistant Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University

Event Details

University programs and activities are open to all eligible participants without regard to identity or other protected characteristics. Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.

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Date

November 10, 2025

Time

12:00 p.m.

Location

Louis A. Simpson International Building, A71

Audience

  • Open to the Public

University Sponsors

PIIRS

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Equal Opportunity and Non-discrimination at Princeton University: Princeton University believes that commitment to equal opportunity for all is favorable to the free and open exchange of ideas, and the University seeks to reach out as widely as possible in order to attract the most qualified individuals as students, faculty, and staff. In applying this policy, the University is committed to nondiscrimination on the basis of personal beliefs or characteristics such as political views, religion, national origin, ancestry, race, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, pregnancy and related conditions, age, marital or domestic partnership status, veteran status, disability and/or other characteristics protected by applicable law in any phase of its education or employment programs or activities. In addition, pursuant to Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 and supporting regulations, Princeton does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the education programs or activities that it operates; this extends to admission and employment. Inquiries about the application of Title IX and its supporting regulations may be directed to the University’s Sexual Misconduct/Title IX Coordinator or to the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, Office for Civil Rights, U.S. Department of Education. See Princeton’s full Equal Opportunity Policy and Nondiscrimination Statement.

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