By Zara Kainat
Innovation is often presented as a corrective to inequality—a tool capable of transforming livelihoods, increasing efficiency, and accelerating growth. Yet innovation that excludes local ownership does not eliminate exploitation; it reorganises it. The language changes, the mechanisms modernise, but the imbalance of power remains intact.
When communities are positioned only as labour, data sources, or passive beneficiaries, innovation becomes extractive rather than emancipatory. Digital platforms, infrastructure projects, and investment-driven development may increase productivity, but without ownership or decision-making power, those who sustain these systems remain structurally vulnerable. Growth, in such cases, is real—but unevenly experienced.
This form of exploitation is subtle because it is policy-neutral. It does not rely on overt coercion, but on design choices that prioritise scale over participation and efficiency over dignity. Local populations are expected to adapt to innovation rather than shape it, absorbing social and environmental costs while value flows outward. What appears as opportunity from a distance is often experienced as adjustment on the ground.
In regions showcased for their natural capital or strategic potential, the absence of ownership transforms development into dependency. Employment is created without mobility, skills are utilised without accumulation, and resources are monetised without shared returns. Innovation, stripped of local stakeholding, thus reproduces older hierarchies under a contemporary vocabulary.
If innovation is to be a genuine alternative to exploitation, it must extend beyond access and inclusion to ownership and voice. Belonging is not symbolic; it is structural. It is reflected in who controls assets, who participates in decision-making, and who benefits sustainably from growth. Without this shift, innovation will continue to reorganise exploitation—more efficiently, more quietly, and with greater legitimacy.
States such as Himachal Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir follow comparable renewable energy and infrastructure-led models, particularly in hydropower. While these projects are framed as sustainable solutions, local communities often remain peripheral to ownership and long-term benefit-sharing, bearing ecological and social costs disproportionate to the returns they receive.
Similarly, Goa and parts of North-Eastern states demonstrate tourism-led innovation where growth is measured through inflows and visibility, yet local populations are largely confined to service roles. Employment is generated, but without asset creation or decision-making power, reinforcing dependency rather than empowerment.
In Odisha and Chhattisgarh, resource-driven development follows the same structural logic. Innovation and industrial expansion are emphasised, but community participation remains limited to compensation mechanisms rather than ownership frameworks, externalising value while localising disruption.
Across these states, the model remains consistent: innovation accelerates growth, but the absence of local stakeholding reorganises exploitation rather than eliminating it. Uttarakhand, therefore, should be read not as an exception, but as part of a broader national development approach where inclusion is promised, but belonging is structurally deferred.







