People do not change behaviour because systems are available. They change behaviour because systems work—reliably, repeatedly, and predictably.
Reliability—not access alone—determines whether systems are used, trusted, and sustained.
The decisive shift occurs at reliability— when systems stop being tested and start being trusted.
Over two decades of work across education, women's health, and public systems have shaped a central question:
Why do people disengage from systems that are meant to serve them—and what makes them return?
My work brings together field experience and systems thinking to understand how trust is built in practice.
Examining how institutional systems can be designed for reliability and earned trust across diverse communities.
Understanding how consistent system performance drives lasting shifts in behaviour and community participation.
Building trust through sustained presence and dialogue with communities across diverse geographies.
Supporting small enterprises in accessing knowledge, markets, and formal systems through reliable platforms.
Moving beyond provision to ownership, enabling communities to actively shape and sustain their systems.
This section brings together writing, reflections, and frameworks emerging from field experience and system-level observation.
An evolving body of work exploring the next phase of development—where reliability becomes central to participation, trust, and citizenship.
These writings aim to connect lived experience with broader development thinking, linking ground realities with institutional and policy conversations.
Exploring grassroots education and India's inclusive growth path.
Read Article →How cooperatives can drive the next wave of development.
Read Article →Punit Asthana and the quiet power of grassroots change.
Read Article →Rethinking India's next growth cycle.
Read Article →Thoughts on public policy and digital inclusion.
View Post →Activity around public policy and governance frameworks.
View Post →Exploring reliability and trust in public systems.
Read Article →Engagements include policy discussions, institutional forums, panel discussions, and keynote talks.
These conversations extend field insights into broader institutional and public dialogue.
View Engagements →