π Urban Villages in Delhi emerged as the city expanded southwards in the 1950s, but their presence was overlooked in the development plans.
π While the city grew around them, these Villages retained their residential areas, leading to a unique coexistence of urbanization and tradition.
π The Urban Villages became spaces for the middle class, universities, and defense bases, with the inhabitants adapting to their changing surroundings.
ποΈ Manufacturing units remain within the city due to the impossibility of moving to the outskirts.
π₯ The urban prokaryote, a new labor class, enters the city seeking middle-class living in affordable areas.
ποΈ Urban Villages in Delhi evolve as spaces for migrant workers and garment manufacturing, leading to struggles over regularization.
π‘ Rent is not just about money, but also a political and social category that creates social relations.
π The book explores the idea that money scales and holds the economy, emphasizing the importance of social institutions like bhichara and kunba.
π° The relationship between rent and capital is uneasy, as seen in the story of a borrower who has to remove his landlord as a partner.
π The video discusses the concept of vernacular forms of capitalism in Indian villages.
π° It explores how communities in these villages invest money to gentrify their property and increase rents.
π The video also highlights the role of caste and community in the urbanization process.
π The urban Dalit and Jat communities in Delhi have different experiences with land ownership and upward mobility.
π The Jat community has a complex relationship with the state, with a mix of anger, hurt, and pushback against formalization.
π‘ The reservation system in government jobs has allowed for a vernacular capitalism to occur along caste lines.
π The video discusses the perception of Urban Villages in Delhi by both the city people and the villagers themselves, focusing on imageability and identity.
ποΈ The conversation also explores the concept of informal rental housing in Delhi's Urban Villages and how they are different from slum rental housing.
π° The interview highlights the broader concept of rent beyond just housing, including intellectual property and the formation of networks and cliques in academic and social circles.
π The video discusses the construction and negotiation of rent in Bichara communities, highlighting the use of maps and agreements.
π The speaker compares the concept of rent in global North cities like San Francisco and New York with its portrayal in the global South, emphasizing the collectivity and investment aspect in the latter.
π³οΈ The video explores the connection between electoral politics and rent, particularly how individuals who have made money through rent invest in politics and elections to establish themselves and gain credibility.