The following micro-economic frameworks that capture this hybridity and fits Indian sanitation’s stylised facts will be discussed:
- The health care model (Grossman 1972; Hurley 2000) that emphasises on the interaction between individual behavior and professionals through the channel of information.
- The network good model (Klemperer 2008) as sanitation comprehends individual and collective infrastructures.
This approach is not incompatible with local or more specific analysis. In fact, the perceived “singularity” (Karpik 2007) of sanitation related to local contexts in reality shares a common theoretical characteristic, that is, a tremendous variety in the technologies that can be used along the sanitation process. However, the current monitoring framework fails to capture the entire “chain”, and thus underestimates the impact on health and environmental outcomes at both, macro and micro levels. Outside empirical development issues, the technological array echoes a general paradigm in social policies focusing purely on how to enable the poor to access adequate services (Mitlin 2014) and preserve the liberty of choice (Dworkin 1988).
Chloé Leclère is a PhD Scholar in Economics at the Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon in France. Her research focuses on sanitation policies in India and explores the specificities related to evaluation of social programmes. She is a member of the research laboratory- Groupe d’Analyse et Théorie Economique Lyon-Saint Etienne in France. She is also affiliated with the Center for Social and Human sciences (CNRS, Ministry of Foreign Affairs) in New Delhi where she is conducting several projects on poverty alleviation in India. She is a former Teaching Fellow at the ENS de Lyon. She holds a Master’s degree in Economic Analysis and Policies from Paris School of Economics in France and another Master’s in Social Sciences from Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon in France.
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