On the Frontline of Global Inequalities: A Decolonial Approach to the Study of Street-Level Bureaucracies

Author:

Eiró Flávio1,Lotta Gabriela2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Groningen , The Netherlands

2. Getúlio Vargas Foundation , Brazil

Abstract

Abstract This article aims to contribute to street-level bureaucracy (SLB) theory by bringing to the forefront the experiences and perspectives of the Global South. Our argument is that mainstream literature in this field overlooks the social tensions that are more explicit in developing societies, resulting in a structurally limited analytical framework. We identify two key factors from the Global South that are often underestimated: the high degree of social inequalities that fundamentally affect state–citizen relationships, and the ways in which the state itself reflects and reproduces these inequalities. Our critique represents a step toward decolonizing the field and highlighting the conceptual contributions that studies from and of the Global South can offer. By examining the experiences of the Global South, we can gain insights into the crises societies in the Global North are also experiencing. Our article aims to contribute to SLB theory by emphasizing the value of incorporating these perspectives into the study of SLB.

Funder

European Research Council

Groningen Research Institute for the Study of Culture

University of Groningen

São Paulo State Research Support Foundation

Brazilian Council for Scientific Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Marketing,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

Reference160 articles.

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2. Failing, writing, litigating: Daily practices of resistance in Belgian welfare bureaucracies;Andreetta;International Journal of Law in Context,2022

3. Patients of the state: An ethnographic account of poor people’s waiting;Auyero;Latin American Research Review,2011

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