How India Governs Through Ambiguity
Ambiguity is not always an accident of poor drafting. In Indian governance, it is frequently a structural feature — a deliberate or functionally useful condition that allows the state to act flexibly, avoid commitment, and maintain multiple positions simultaneously. Laws with imprecise definitions enable enforcement officials to apply them selectively. Guidelines with soft eligibility criteria allow scheme benefits to be distributed with political discretion. Regulations with undefined terms give regulators room to interpret their mandate as political conditions evolve. And official statements that are formally ambiguous allow the government to claim credit with multiple constituencies simultaneously, while making it harder for critics to establish a precise standard against which action or inaction can be measured. Representational Image: How India Governs Through Ambiguity This is not an exclusively Indian phenomenon — all large governance systems use ambiguity as a tool — but in...