Formality and informality in an Indian urban waste economy

Barbara Harriss-White
2017 International journal of sociology and social policy  
Purpose -The purpose of this paper is to contribute original evidence about the conditions for formal and informal contracts for commodities and labour in the waste economy of a South Indian town. Design/methodology/approach -Field research was exploratory, based on snowball sampling and urban traversing. The analysis follows capital and labour in the sub-circuits of capital generating waste in production, distribution, consumption, the production of labour and the reproduction of society.
more » ... ngs -Regardless of legal regulation, which is selectively enforced, formal contracts are limited to active inspection regimes; direct transactions with or within the state; and long-distance transactions. Formal labour contracts are least incomplete for state employment, and for relatively scarce skilled labour in the private sector. Research limitations/implications -The research design does not permit quantified generalisations. Practical implications -Waste management technology evaluations neglect the social costs of displacing a large informal labour force. Social implications -While slowly dissolving occupational barriers of untouchability, the waste economy is a low-status labour absorber of last resort, exit from which is extremely difficult. Originality/value -The first systematic exploration of formal and informal contracts in an Indian small-town waste economy.
doi:10.1108/ijssp-07-2016-0084 fatcat:6vu5d7lifjhhvldv5hsdvjbv7i