| State
of Governance: Delhi Citizen Handbook 2006
The State of Governance: Delhi Citizen Handbook
2006 is an administrative and financial analysis
of departments, agencies, boards and issues of the Delhi
State Government that hopes to further citizens’
understanding of the workings of the government. The Handbook
also makes constructive and bold recommendations for improving
the quality and effectiveness of governance. It recommends
policy reforms based on the concept of new public management,
the principle of subsidiarity, government provision and private
production, expanding choice and competition, ward level management
and result oriented management.
More than 30 departments, boards and agencies were selected
for this study. The first issue taken up was Delhi’s
unique experiment in participatory governance, the Bhagidari
scheme. Through appropriate departments, general public services
like education, water, power, fire service, irrigation and
flood control are evaluated in detail. Delhi’s labour
welfare schemes and employment exchanges along with land and
development management of the Delhi Development Authority
(DDA) are put under the microscope.
Delhi state’s role in cultural issues like languages,
archaeology and archives as well as in religion through the
Haj Committee, Gurudwara Election Office, and the Waqf Board
were thoroughly analysed. It was felt that not only government’s
expenditures but also its efforts to raise revenues though
myriad taxes and levies raise concerns about the efficiency
and transparency of the processes. Overall, the 2006 Handbook
covers a wide range of issues and ABCDs that affect everyday
life of ordinary citizens of the city.
The mammoth task of compiling credible information was completed
by young students who took up the challenge of going through
strange corridors of the state departments and dig information
that went into the compilation of this simple yet powerful
study. The researchers who made all these possible refute
the charge that the nation’s youth has become apathetic
and cynical. Instead of morchas and dharnas,
in this information age they toiled to generate knowledge
and understanding so that we may have informed debates and
decisions. We hope that their labour would not go waste.
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