Friday, April 17, 2009

Caste politics and redistribution: Evidence from Uttar Pradesh


































This survey based study was held in 35 districts (250 villages) of Uttar Pradesh. Our team stayed for 1 day in each village and conducted several activities. In this survey we had two type of samples. One is for household survey and another for village survey (based on participatory rural appraisal).

{From top to bottom: Best trainee award to Rashmi and Santosh given by Atulesh, village survey, household survey, team always utilize free time, survey and village mapping, trying to get answer in question related to how political parties redistributed money and public services among three classes of society (question is asking to distribute money among three plates representing three classes; a perfect lichter scale)}

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

When they were searching for life, Morsel was there













Climate change is the biggest debate in the world and flood is one example of its impact. Morsel with Indian statistical Institute (Delhi) and Delhi School of Economics worked in Bihar, a very politically active state, which hit hard by flood last year. Kosi River changed its course and claims thousands life. Our team worked there to find impact on social and economic life of villagers due to said flood.

{From top to bottom: Professor Rohini Somanathan (Delhi School of Economics) and Sarubh Srivastava (Morsel) discussing with the villagers about their problems after Kosi River flood. Villagers made these sculptures. Where to go: Prof. Rohini, Atulesh and Saurabh, villagers are working on a bridge, flood impact: a house ruined, we have no house: villagers in Murliganj district, Oh God! What happened: Prof. Rohini in poorvi godwari Village, flood impact: peope have only boat to get home, flood gives some employment too, ved is filling a questionnaire during pilot survey in Lachchmipur village (Madhepura district)


Tuesday, April 14, 2009

This is how we found Bihar after flood in Kosi river



We were in Bihar to collect different data. When Morsel team(Bhartendu, Atulesh, Abhijeet and others) entered the state, sight was horrible. Most of the bridges were drowned deep into the flood water. Some of them were broken badly.
See these pics and get to know that how tough it was to work in these areas of Bihar. But still our project team did an excellent work and provided good results.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Campaigns to Influence Voting Behavior in India

Project Overview: With young democracies facing challenges across the developing world, efforts are underway to mobilize voters in order to make elected officials more accountable for delivering results. Unfortunately, we observe that in many places, voters do not seem to use candidates' performance or policy priorities as their key criteria. Beyond these observations, little rigorous evidence exists to explain individuals' voting behavior in low-income countries, or how voters' actions can improve government outcomes. Does voting behavior based on ethnicity, caste or gender outweigh voting based on issues and performance in poor, rural communities? Can voter mobilization or education campaigns lead to more accountable government? These questions are currently being addressed using experimental data that compares the behavior of voters in randomly selected villages exposed to a voter campaign with the behavior of voters in a comparable set of villages that were not included in the campaign. Several campaigns were carried out by a local NGO to test the influence of interventions such as entertainment, "dialoguing," community meetings, and posting materials on voting behavior.
To see whether campaigns could induce voters to hold corrupt officials accountable, one campaign provided an anti-corruption message along with publicly-available information about incumbents' performance in office. Another campaign focused on reducing caste-based voting, by helping communities identify issues of importance to them and encouraging people to vote based on those issues rather than for parties associated with their castes. Finally, a female voter mobilization campaign was designed to measure whether election outcomes would be more representative of women's priorities if more women voted.

Policy Relevance:
The results of this evaluation will provide valuable information about rural voters' behavior. In addition, the estimated impacts of various voter education/mobilization campaigns will suggest ways for governments and NGO's to increase communities' capacity to hold their elected leaders accountable for their performance.
Courtesy- JPAL (http://www.povertyactionlab.com/)


ABOUT US

Mass Oriented Research and Social Elevation Lab (MORSEL) came into existence on June 16, 2007 as a registered society under Registration Act, 1860. MORSEL has its head office in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India. It is a not for profit organization that provides logistic and research support to academic research in social science. Though the company was formally established in 2007, the MORSEL team has been active in the research and data collection for last three years.MORSEL’s main forte is its ability of collecting large scale primary data as well as secondary data from various government agencies. It has a professional team of experienced researchers who are adept in planning surveys, estimating sample sizes, designing questionnaires and providing support for the pilot.