How did slums survive during the lockdown? | The Business Standard
Skip to main content
  • Epaper
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Banking
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • Subscribe
    • Epaper
    • GOVT. Ad
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Thursday
May 15, 2025

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Epaper
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Banking
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • Subscribe
    • Epaper
    • GOVT. Ad
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
THURSDAY, MAY 15, 2025
How did slums survive during the lockdown?

Thoughts

Adam Auerbach and Tariq Thachil
16 December, 2020, 09:15 am
Last modified: 16 December, 2020, 09:21 am

Related News

  • Rajuk plans to build Shaheed Mir Mugdho Park after slum eviction in Uttara
  • Fire destroys 14 homes in Chattogram’s CRB slum
  • Fire at BRP slum in Bhashantek under control
  • Bhola slum: Meghna's gift for Dhaka
  • Dhaka's informal settlements: Redefining urban planning for an inclusive future

How did slums survive during the lockdown?

The pandemic has shown that slums need sustained engagement between crises

Adam Auerbach and Tariq Thachil
16 December, 2020, 09:15 am
Last modified: 16 December, 2020, 09:21 am
From left Adam Auerbach and Tariq Thachil. Illustration: TBS
From left Adam Auerbach and Tariq Thachil. Illustration: TBS

Usually, when Adeel Kureshi contacts government officials, it is to demand paved roads, sewers, and streetlights for Pahari Nagar, a sprawling slum settlement in eastern Jaipur. This past April, though, Kureshi was seeing to more pressing needs—making sure residents have enough food and fuel during the raging coronavirus pandemic and stringent lockdown. Kureshi, an informal leader and resident of Pahari Nagar, told us over the phone: "I have tried to make a list of households who are the rozkamane vale, roz khane vale. If they don't work for one day they will go hungry. So I made sure they got supplies…"

Six hundred kilometers away in Bhopal, Om Prasad, another slum leader, was scrambling to ensure residents were keeping the settlement clean and understood how easily the virus can jump from person to person. "The first thing I did [following the lockdown's announcement] is get the settlement cleaned. The second thing was to build awareness about how the disease can spread between neighbours."

India's slums received substantial media attention for being potential coronavirus hotspots. Journalists note that slum communities are especially vulnerable to the spread of the virus, and the economic consequences of restrictive mitigation strategies. Slum residents are susceptible given most work in the informal sector and live in crowded conditions, often with inadequate access to essential public services like water and sanitation.

The Business Standard Google News Keep updated, follow The Business Standard's Google news channel

Despite widespread concerns, we have little systematic information from slum residents about their pandemic-time experiences. Most reporting has focused on conversations with residents in 'famous' slums in megacities like Dharavi in Mumbai. These city-sized slums are unrepresentative of most settlements, which are smaller and in less metropolitan cities. Media accounts also tend to render settlements as uniformly vulnerable and helplessly passive in the face of the pandemic. These portrayals ignore significant variation across slums in their levels of infrastructural development, and neglect the internal structures of self-governance through which these communities solve problems during 'normal times'.

To better understand how slum residents were affected by the lockdown and pandemic, we conducted a phone survey with 321 slum leaders across 79 slums in Jaipur and Bhopal, at the height of the lockdown in April and May 2020. To our knowledge this is the first such effort to canvas these important leaders during the pandemic. What did we find?

Slum communities are especially vulnerable to the spread of the virus. Photo: Adam Auerbach/Hindustan Times
Slum communities are especially vulnerable to the spread of the virus. Photo: Adam Auerbach/Hindustan Times

First, our survey demonstrated that slum leaders are not idly watching the virus spread and economic distress deepen. Roughly six in ten leaders contacted a local politician during the lockdown to request assistance. However, the focus of their lobbying efforts shifted dramatically from 'normal' times. 91% of requests during the lockdown were for food rations, instead of more usual demands for public infrastructure. This reorientation makes sense given leaders estimated the average household in their settlement had only enough savings to survive for 24 days.This shift in focus highlights a hidden cost of the pandemic—a reduction in the time leaders have to address pre-existing deficiencies in basic public services.

Second, pre-pandemic disparities in infrastructural development also shape the extent to which residents can abide by public health guidelines. 39% of the 1594 households we surveyed across the same 79 settlements in 2015 lack domestic water taps. Accessing water requires them to congregate at communal sources like public taps and truck-fed tanks, where intermittency in water supply creates uncertainty that forces long waits. Slum leaders in settlements with sparser household connections are nearly twice as likely to report public water sources as a problem for social distancing than leaders in settlements with more widespread connectivity. As Vikram, a slum leader in Jaipur told us, "people understand it is dangerous to come to a crowded place for water, but they have to do it." Approaching'slums' as a homogenous category misses how disparities across settlements matter during the crisis.

Third, slum leaders are not uniform in their ability to help residents. We asked leaders to enumerate any relief schemes that had been initiated or expanded during the lockdown that slum residents might benefit from. 47% of leaders correctly identified zero or 1 scheme, while 25.5% of leaders correctly identified 3 or more schemes. Slum leaders also varied in their reported ability to get requested assistance from politicians. Two key factors underpinned their influence with city leaders: education and their embeddedness in political party networks. In prior, pre-pandemic research, we found these exact traits corresponded with effectiveness in everyday problem-solving. Leaders who were effective before the pandemic remained more effective during it.

Public health experts have called for community-driven solutions to slow transmission and soften the economic blow of containment measures. In India's slums, such participatory efforts will encounter informal leaders like Kureshi, Om Prasad, and Vikram. Our findings reveal active forms of leadership even in the most underserved areas of India's cities. However, we also document that slum leaders are deeply dependent on party networks, and that nine in ten are men. These traits inevitably bias the types of residents that leaders are most likely to hear and help. Rather than flatten and simplify slum communities, participatory efforts must recognize these complexities within them.

A small silver lining to the pandemic has been in rendering visible the Indian state's inadequate understanding of important urban communities, ranging from circular migrants to slum residents. Acting on this realization requires more than calls for making cities inclusive. It requires sustained engagement between crises, not a flurry of recognition during them.


Adam Auerbach is an assistant professor in the School of International Service, American University and author of Demanding Development: The Politics of Public Goods Provision in India's Urban Slums (Cambridge University Press, 2020).


Tariq Thachil is an associate professor of Political Science, and Madan Lal Sobti Chair of Contemporary India, and Director of the Center for the Advanced Study of India, University of Pennsylvania.


Disclaimer: This article first appeared in Hindustan Times, and is published by special syndication arrangement.

Slum / survive / lockdown

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • Jagannath University students and teachers protest at the Kakrail Mosque intersection in Dhaka on 15 May 2025. Photo: Mehedi Hasan/TBS
    Teachers announce JnU shutdown until 3 demands met as Kakrail blockade continues
  • Representational image. Photo: Mehedi Hasan/TBS
    DSEX slumps to nearly 5-year low amid market jitters
  • Malaysia-bound workers throng Dhaka's Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport on Thursday (31 May) after they failed to get tickets from the recruiting agencies on time. File Photo: TBS
    Malaysia to soon inform decision on opening labour market to all Bangladeshi agencies: Asif Nazrul

MOST VIEWED

  • Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus speaking at Chittagong Port on 14 May 2025. Photo: CA Press Wing
    Ctg port must emerge as best with int'l standard facilities for economic growth: CA
  • Shahriar Alam Shammo. Photo: Collected
    3 arrested over JCD leader Shammo killing
  • Up to 20% dearness allowance for govt employees likely from July
    Up to 20% dearness allowance for govt employees likely from July
  • Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus on a visit to Chattogram on 14 May 2025. Photo: TBS
    CA Yunus begins Chattogram tour with packed engagements
  • Infograph: TBS
    Govt plans to align official land price with market rates
  • Infographics: TBS
    $3.5b loan unlocked with shift to market-based exchange rate

Related News

  • Rajuk plans to build Shaheed Mir Mugdho Park after slum eviction in Uttara
  • Fire destroys 14 homes in Chattogram’s CRB slum
  • Fire at BRP slum in Bhashantek under control
  • Bhola slum: Meghna's gift for Dhaka
  • Dhaka's informal settlements: Redefining urban planning for an inclusive future

Features

An old-fashioned telescope, also from an old ship, is displayed at a store at Chattogram’s Madam Bibir Hat area. PHOTO: TBS

NO SCRAP LEFT BEHIND: How Bhatiari’s ship graveyard still furnishes homes across Bangladesh

21h | Panorama
Sketch: TBS

‘National University is now focusing on technical and language education’

1d | Pursuit
Illustration: TBS

How to crack the code to get into multinational companies

1d | Pursuit
More than 100 trucks of pineapples are sold from Madhupur every day, each carrying 3,000 to 10,000 pineapples. Photo: TBS

The bitter aftertaste of Madhupur's sweet pineapples

1d | Panorama

More Videos from TBS

Russia-Ukraine talks in Istanbul: Russian President Putin not on the list

Russia-Ukraine talks in Istanbul: Russian President Putin not on the list

54m | TBS World
Photo Exhibition Showcasing Indigenous Heritage Underway in Bandarban

Photo Exhibition Showcasing Indigenous Heritage Underway in Bandarban

1h | TBS Today
How can tax reforms help reduce income?

How can tax reforms help reduce income?

1h | TBS Programs
$3.5b loan unlocked with shift to market-based exchange rate

$3.5b loan unlocked with shift to market-based exchange rate

2h | TBS Insight
EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2025
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net