%0 Journal Article %T Globalisation and City-zenship in a Not-so-Networked Society: Looking for Narratives of Empowerment in the Process of Seepage of Techno-Cultural Practices %A Atreyee Majumdar %J Socio-Legal Review %D 2010 %I National Law School of India University %X The article seeks to answer questions crucial to the marginalisation debate like ¨C Is commercial globalization brining in more than consumer goods into developing countries? And if so, then what is the consequent impact on the relationship between the state and its citizens. While the city in the developed world acts as a node of contact with the forces of globalization, sending out the messages of the global ¡®fantasy¡¯, the city in the developing world acts as a receptor of such signals from which the ¡®fantasy¡¯ can be accessed by the rest of the developed world. Persons living in the city in the developing world, as a result, can not only have greater access to the cultural products of globalization, but also absorbs the practices of the networked worlds. This process of seepage of practices of globalization, these city-zens undergo a change in their equation with the state, which previously used to be the sole mediator between the city-zens and the worlds of modernity and progress. %U http://www.nls.ac.in/ojs-2.2.3/index.php/slr/article/view/47