ERG alum Dr. Malini Ranganathan, Associate Professor at American University, recently took time to speak with us about her new award winning book, Corruption Plots: Stories, Ethics and Publics of the Late Capitalist City, and the ways ERG has shaped her work.
Can you tell me about your recent book award?
My latest book Corruption Plots: Stories, Ethics and Publics of the Late Capitalist City, coauthored with David Pike and Sapana Doshi, received the Anthony Leeds Book Prize for Critical Urban Anthropology. This award recognizes a book that makes innovative methodological and theoretical contributions to the field of urban anthropology. I am a scholar, broadly speaking, of urban geography, but one who also engages with anthropology and critical development studies literature. I specialize in questions of political ecology and environmental justice, specifically the political economy of land, labor, water, and climate risk in the contemporary city. I also look at how historical racial segregation, caste based segregation, working-class histories, and state and neoliberal political economies shaped the contemporary city. As a geographer, I’m interested both in history as well as the contemporary moment. This interest in geography was fostered by the incredibly interdisciplinary degree that I got from ERG, and by my designated emphasis in Global Metropolitan Studies.
What about this book most excites you?
Corruption Plots: Stories, Ethics and Publics of the Late Capitalist City is a book that takes seriously the fact that we’re living in a world that’s growing more unequal, with the global elite increasingly taking control of the political process, especially through land and real estate manipulations. The book is set in the “city of late capitalism,” that is to say the contemporary global city everywhere. The cover of the book features a very iconic but also very nefarious real estate project. It is the golden-hued Trump towers located in Mumbai, which is the finance capital of India, under construction. In the foreground is a 30-year-old working class tenement which is slated for eviction to make way for grounds and parks associated with the Trump towers. The construction of theTrump towers themselves are completely mired in scandals and dubious deals, something that has also been reported on in the press. We put this picture on the cover because it’s emblematic of this moment of late capitalism, where real estate deals are allowed to go through with impunity in global cities, increasing the wealth divide between the haves and the have nots.
But people aren’t taking this lying down. People are actually resisting and trying to fight back, and they’re often using the label “corruption” to talk about land and real estate projects that are happening in global cities like Mumbai and Bangalore in South India, and in Sao Paulo, Lagos, and even New York and London. They’re using this vocabulary of corruption to call attention to wealth hoarding, land grabbing, evictions, and growing economic polarization. And what we argue in the book is that the ways that people are using the word corruption completely flies in the face of conventional (and narrow) definitions of corruption put forward by development finance institutions such as the World Bank or Transparency International. They often locate corruption in bureaucrats or collapse it to bribery. But this is far bigger than that. Often it isn’t bribery that ordinary people are calling attention to, but literally the hoarding of resources that can happen through entirely legal means–with or without briber. For example, slum land, or common land, or land that’s reserved for low income housing, can be suddenly surreptitiously turned over to wealthy commercial real estate interests through legal channels. It might happen through fast track clearances or through some sort of palm greasing.
What’s really fascinating for myself and the co-authors of this book—Sapana Doshi, who is also a Berkeley graduate, and David Pike, who’s my colleague at American University—is the creative deployment of corruption talk. We argue that utilization of the term corruption serves as a political narrative to call out increasing inequality in global cities. We created the book through collaborative ethnographic field work in India in 2018, supported by the Andrew Mellon American Council of Learned Societies Grant. We also drew from novels and films about the post-colonial city. Films are very good at uncovering people’s emotions, characters, and contradictory and layered personalities and their relationships with each other, as well as training a spotlight on the importance of storytelling. And what’s really at the heart of our book is how corruption becomes a very powerful narrative, as I said, to expose land mis-dealings as the major arena for capitalist accumulation.
What difference did ERG make in your research?
ERG attracts and nurtures people with a passion and fire that burns inside of you to really expose, address, and research systemic inequality–whether that is related to land, water, climate, energy, or other resources. Because ERG is a deeply ethically oriented program, I think all of my peers were thinking about power in different ways. Some of them, of course, were looking more at the quantitative aspects of energy, fuels, carbon emissions, and modeling. And some of them, especially my peers who took a lot of classes in Geography and the Department of City and Regional Planning, were interested in social theory and political economy and qualitative methods to think about inequality. That systemic ingrained, historically situated inequality drives us to think about social justice as a means to creating a more ethical, humane, and livable world. That’s the real DNA of ERG: it’s the people who are passionate about that.
Professor Isha Ray’s Water and Development class changed my life because it not only gave me a kind of theoretical vocabulary to think about the political economy of resources, but also exposure to field-based knowledge when we read how gender, class, caste, and local politics shape water access. I was also deeply shaped by Professor Dick Norgaard and Professor Gene Rochlin. They co-taught our cohort seminar, introducing us to different topics in the field of environmental thought. All data and social science research tells a story, a particular story in one way; it can hide certain things and it can reveal certain things. You have to be very cognizant of the way academic scholarship conveys particular knowledge. Finally, my doctoral advisor who was in DCRP at the time, Ananya Roy, truly believed in me and helped me to find my voice as a scholar and as an advocate for urban and environmental justice. She also changed my life and I am happy to still be in conversation with her about our mutual interests in racial exclusion and the city.
I am also very grateful for my more quantitative ERG training with John Harte and Dan Kammen, giving me fluency with environmental metrics, “back of the envelope” calculations, and environmental policymaking. I think about how certain stories are told with quantitative data and other stories may not be told, and the way numbers can be used and how they are infused with power. I also took wonderful classes in Geography with Gillian Hart and Michael Watts. For me, this whole array of classes from the social sciences to natural sciences, in and out of ERG, shaped the person I am today.

