Faculty Seminar: Talk on Normativising Competitive Markets Contextually; Transmission Art Installation — Reordered Spaces
About the Installation
In the light of recent legal debates concerning street food vending, the video installations question habits of consumption and politics of public spaces complemented by a radio transmission of the audioscape, representing tactical ownership of available spectrum resource within private spaces.
Original installation link can be read here.
Click to read the full details of the event published on the website of Azim Premji University on March 26, 2013
About the Talk
Using urban street food vending as an example, this paper explores the possibilities of a contextualised normative outlook towards competitive markets, competition law, and economic policy in India. I argue that such an outlook would need to creatively engage with the phenomenon of substantial employment informality in India while also judiciously avoiding the allure of dogmatic half-truths based on empirically contestable assumptions about efficiency, illegality and welfare. In India the informal food sector caters to a vast population of desperately poor (and hungry) consumers who cannot afford a qualitatively substitutable product that is retailed through the formal production process. Private enterprise at generating affordable access to food in public spaces remains legally ambiguous, and the narratives of street food law, and street vending more generally, indicate confusion over how to understand the informal sector’s role in competitive urban retail trade. This paper suggests that a distinctively Indian perspective of constitutional economics is required to help us realign our (presently misguided) economic development models to appropriately recognize the empirical realities of the entrepreneurs in our midst, the pre-commitments of our unique constitutional order and competition policy, and the real demands of our customers as citizens.
Notes on the Speakers:
Abhayraj Naik works on issues in legal theory, philosophy, criminal justice, urban governance, ecology, and technology. He holds law degrees from the National Law School of India University (Bangalore) and the Yale Law School (New Haven).
Sharath Chandra Ram has research and pedagogical interests in citizen science, multimodal interaction, accessibility and digital humanities. He graduated from the University of Edinburgh specializing in Artificial Intelligence and interactive virtual environments and is Faculty at Srishti School of Art Design & Technology. As a researcher at the Centre for Internet & Society, he coordinates activities of the Metaculture Media Lab , an open citizen lab, now part of Columbia University's 'Dorkbot' collective.