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Humans are still core to Digital India - Intermediaries

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December 22, 2020

What is the issue?

  • Even in ‘Digital India’, humans are significant in brokering trust between governments and citizens, and this was especially evident during the pandemic.
  • It is time to accommodate intermediaries, who deliver last mile governance, into the design of e-governance programmes.

Who are the intermediaries?

  • Intermediaries are crucial offline architectures that enable the state to do its work better.
  • Offline intermediaries can be both political and apolitical, individuals and collectives, with varying motivations to do this work.
  • Apolitical social workers and community leaders do their work as service.
  • Partisan political individuals see their work as constituency service to secure vote bases.
  • Community-based organisations and NGOs see their work as allied to their core work.

What role do intermediaries play?

  • Intermediaries help citizens overcome barriers to awareness (of availability of digital services and rights from the state) and ability.
  • This includes the ability to navigate these solutions with trust.
  • The barriers are worse for citizens who are marginalised, with the poor, women, the elderly, and caste and gender minorities being additionally disadvantaged.
  • Intermediaries support individuals by placing complaints, directing them to the right authorities, and following up.
  • From people's perspective, intermediaries help them see the government.

Are they being best utilised?

  • During the pandemic, public came to rely on various individuals to address daily needs, even as more and more services went online.
    • During this time, eGovernments Foundation (eGov) and Aapti Institute came together to explore how digitally excluded communities engage with governance.
    • It was learnt that even in ‘Digital India’, humans are significant in brokering trust between governments and citizens.
    • These intermediaries often worked without any formal backing and role.
  • But the above reality was not considered in the design of most e-governance programmes.
  • For instance, intermediaries struggled with indicating that they were placing a complaint for someone else, and with communicating the impact (for example, the number of houses affected by the problem).
  • Only a few States have built a cadre of individuals for last mile governance.
  • Andhra Pradesh, for instance, rolled out a ward secretariat programme with over 16,000 ward secretaries and volunteers.
  • They worked for delivering government services at citizens’ doorstep.

What could the policy approach be?

  • Leaning on intermediaries can unlock the capacity of the state to serve citizens.
  • Indeed, they are a reality of everyday life for the average Indian, and incorporating this reality in design can be impactful.
  • Various types and forms of intermediation emerge based on regional, social, cultural and economic contexts.
  • A ‘one size fits all’ approach will not work.
  • It is thus crucial to think about leveraging the strengths of intermediaries.
  • Intermediaries are to be seen as crucial to the realisation of governance outcomes and as a natural extension of the governance model.
  • At a broader level, increasing digitisation of governance across domains including healthcare, financial inclusion, justice and social services is inevitable.
  • Meanwhile, during this transition, work has to be on with intermediaries to raise citizens’ awareness, build intermediaries’ skills and capabilities, and establish governance frameworks with suitable feedback loops.
  • All these go in to supporting the process of responsible, responsive and data-driven governance across domains.

 

Source: The Hindu

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