Datafying anti-poverty programmes: implications for data justice |
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Authors: | Silvia Masiero Soumyo Das |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Business and Economics, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UKs.masiero@lboro.ac.uk;3. Centre for Information Technology and Public Policy, International Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore, India |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThis paper seeks to illuminate the significance of datafication for anti-poverty programmes, meaning social protection schemes designed specifically for poor people. The conversion of beneficiary populations into machine-readable data enables two core functions of social protection, those of recognising entitled beneficiaries and assigning entitlements connected to each anti-poverty scheme. Drawing on the incorporation of Aadhaar, India’s biometric population database, in the national agenda for social protection, we unpack a techno-rational perspective that crafts datafication as a means to enhance the effectiveness of anti-poverty schemes. Nevertheless, narratives collected in the field show multiple forms of data injustice on recipients, underpinned by Aadhaar’s functionality for a shift of the social protection agenda from in-kind subsidies to cash transfers. Based on such narratives the paper introduces a politically embedded view of data, framing datafication as a transformative force that contributes to reforming existing anti-poverty schemes. |
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Keywords: | Datafication anti-poverty programmes data justice Aadhaar India |
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