This document discusses the peri-urban interface and uses the example of Kapas Hera town in Delhi, India. It defines the peri-urban interface as a transitional zone between urban and rural areas with complex spatial mixes of activities. Kapas Hera has a population of 35,000 residents but hosts around 200,000 migrant workers from Bihar and eastern Uttar Pradesh. These migrant workers face poor living conditions and lack of access to basic amenities. While Kapas Hera exhibits urban-rural linkages, it has not benefited from globalization and shows a "rurban bias," with its population struggling for existence between urban and rural classifications.