IJ
IJCRM
International Journal of Contemporary Research in Multidisciplinary
ISSN: 2583-7397
Open Access • Peer Reviewed
Impact Factor: 5.67

International Journal of Contemporary Research In Multidisciplinary, 2026;5(2):437-442

Digital Leviathan: A Theoretical Critique of Algorithmic Governance and the Crisis of Political Obligation in the Context of India's E-Governance Framework

Author Name: Chameli Khatun;  

1. SET Qualified, M.A. Political Science, University of Kalyani, West Bengal, India

Abstract

The 21st century has witnessed a paradigm shift in the way states are governed. Human decision-making and administrative discretion are increasingly being replaced by complex mathematical processes and automated systems, collectively known as ‘algorithmic governance’. This paper provides a critical analysis of this digital transition through the lenses of classical and contemporary political theories. The primary focus of this research is the burgeoning crisis of ‘political obligation’. In a system where the state increasingly relies on data-driven legitimacy rather than the direct, voluntary consent of its citizens, the traditional social contract is facing an unprecedented breakdown.

By synthesising John Locke’s theory of the Social Contract, John Rawls’ principles of Justice as Fairness, and Michel Foucault’s concept of Biopolitics/Surveillance, this study scrutinises the exclusionary mechanisms within India's e-governance infrastructure, particularly the Aadhaar and Digital Ration Card systems. The research identifies those technical glitches, often dismissed as mere "exclusion errors," are in fact fundamental constitutional failures that jeopardise the rights of marginalised populations. The paper concludes by arguing for a ‘human-centric’ digital governance model that restores constitutional accountability, warning that a failure to do so will result in an authoritarian "Digital Leviathan."

Keywords

Algorithmic Governance, Political Obligation, Digital Leviathan, Bio-politics, Social Contract, Digital Exclusion, Aadhaar.