ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

Dr Mahvish  Shami

Dr Mahvish Shami

Programme Co-Director of Development Management

Department of International Development

Telephone
+44 (0)20 7852 3639
orcid
Languages
English, Urdu
Key Expertise
Clientelism, Pakistan, Poverty, Collective Action, Access to Justice

About me

I am an Assistant Professor at the Department of International Development. I have been a visiting research fellow at the School of Advance International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, and at Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford University. After completing my PhD from the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ I did Post-Doctoral fellowship at the Institute of Food and Resource Economics, Copenhagen University and subsequently was a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳.

My research interests focus on the impact of unequal power relations – particularly clientelism – on the welfare of the poor. While most of the literature on clientelism has focused on redistributive policies, my work looks at alternative solutions, aimed at altering relative bargaining powers, for improving outcomes for the poor. My research explores various aspects of the interaction between patrons and their clients. In the past I have looked at the level of collective action under hierarchical relationships, the affect this relationship has on levels of publics goods provision and how altering bargaining changes the nature of the relationship.

My current research focuses on poor citizens’ access to justice. I explore the barriers they face when accessing formal dispute resolution bodies. While the current literature looks at the institutional underpinnings of these restrictions, I argue that a major hurdle in developing countries comes in the form of social barriers, stemming from the presence of clientelist networks. I stipulate that asymmetric power distribution enables patrons to bar clients from accessing formal institutions. Such barriers can’t be rectified through institutional reforms. My work explores alternative policy tools which could be used to improve peasants’ access to formal justice systems.

Secondly, I look at how clientelism works in urban slums. While urban clientelism has been studied extensively over the last 2 decades, there is still a dearth of information at the household level. My research aims to fill this gap by making use of a unique household-level dataset from slums in Lahore, Pakistan. The aim of this research is to highlight the nuances of urban clientelist networks and how they compare to those found in rural settings.

Selected publications

Publications

  • Targeting the Centre and (Least) Poor: Evidence from Urban Pakistan (with Majid). Urban Studies. Forthcoming

  • Unpacking Rural-Urban Clientelist Networks (with Majid). Oxford Development Studies. Forthcoming

  • What Do Brokers Provide for Urban Slums? Journal of International Development. Forthcoming

  • The Incoherence of Institutional Reform: Decentralization as a Structural Solution. Studies in Comparative International Development, 57(1), 2022 (with Faguet).

  • Access to Justice in Clientelist Networks. British Journal of Criminology, 62(2), 2022.

  • Connectivity, Clientelism and Public Provision. British Journal of Political Science, 49(4), 2019.

  •  Collective Action, Clientelism, and Connectivity. American Political Science Review, 106(3), 2012.

  • World Development, 40(5), 2012.

  • Fiscal Policy and Spatial Inequality in Latin America and Beyond. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series, 2008 (with Faguet).

Working Papers

  • Migrant Networks of Access: the case of public goods provision in slums (with Majid).

  • Informal Barriers to Accessing Justice (with Nievett). 

  • Collective Action under Hierarchical Relationships.
Awards

Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship 2012-2015

Expertise Details

agrarian development; agrarian power relations; collective action; community-based development; development economics; informal institution; informal networks; interlinked markets; land reforms; political development; political economy of development