Events

CPR-CSH Workshop| Doing the ‘Dirty’ Work: Changing Caste and Value Relations in Delhi’s Waste Economies

Date and Time

September 26, 2023

3:45 pm to 5:15 pm

Location

Online via Zoom and CPR Conference Room

Speakers
Aparna Agarwal

Assistant Professor, School of Government and Public Policy, O.P. Jindal Global University

The Centre for Policy Research (CPR) and Centre de Sciences Humaines (CSH) invite you to a workshop on:

Doing the ‘Dirty’ Work: Changing Caste and Value Relations in Delhi’s Waste Economies

Speaker: Aparna Agarwal, Assistant Professor, School of Government and Public Policy, O.P. Jindal Global University

Tuesday, 26 September 2023, 3:45 PM IST onwards. The event will be held in the CPR conference room and over Zoom.

Register to attend in-person
Register to attend on Zoom.

About the Talk

This paper focuses on the life worlds of waste workers from multiple caste communities in and around the Bhalswa landfill in Delhi. With the burgeoning of waste materials since India’s liberalisation, many lower-caste communities that had previously not been involved in waste work have now been drawn into waste economies. Historically, waste-work in South Aisa was structured around rigid caste hierarchies and was dominated by particular Scheduled Caste (SC) communities. Other ‘lower caste’ communities who had not been ascribed the status of untouchability did not engage in such work. However, waste work is no longer limited to traditional SC communities. Given this, in this talk, the speaker examines the transformation of caste-based practices and hierarchies vis-a-vis expanding waste economies.
She studies this by observing the acts of discrimination around the workplace and the neighborhood of waste workers and by mapping the everyday lives of waste workers around the Bhalswa landfill in Delhi. In particular, she examines the life worlds of three different waste-picking communities—nomadic communities, Hindu OBCs, and Bengali Muslims, and examines how caste-based discrimination and stigma associated with waste work plays out differently for these three communities within the localised context of Bhalswa landfill. She argues that the ascribed characteristics of the caste system may or may not fade over time, but they get transferred to other marginalised communities in the form of waste work because of changes led by capitalism and subsequent urbanisation. In the talk, she further problematises the question of caste and waste work by examining the intersections between materials, value, and identity.

About the Speaker

Aparna Agarwal is an Assistant Professor at the School of Government and Public Policy, O.P. Jindal Global University. She completed her D.Phil. from the Department of International Development, University of Oxford. Before joining the University of Oxford, she finished her B.A. (Hons.) from the University of Delhi, and her M.A and M.Phil. from Jawaharlal Nehru University, in Political Science.
Her research interests lie in the fields of urban sociology, waste studies, labour studies, anti-caste studies, political ecology, and Indian politics. She is currently working on perceptions of the environment around waste sites in Delhi.

Find all the available videos of our previous workshops, here.