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RAISING HER VOICE, CHANGING THEIR VOTE: WOMEN’S SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION AND GENDER QUOTAS IN INDIA’S PANCHAYATI RAJ

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Material Information

Title:
RAISING HER VOICE, CHANGING THEIR VOTE: WOMEN’S SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION AND GENDER QUOTAS IN INDIA’S PANCHAYATI RAJ
Physical Description:
Book
Language:
English
Creator:
Robinson, Laura
Publisher:
New College of Florida
Place of Publication:
Sarasota, Fla.
Publication Date:

Thesis/Dissertation Information

Degree:
Bachelor's ( B.A.)
Degree Grantor:
New College of Florida
Degree Divisions:
Social Sciences
Area of Concentration:
International and Area Studies, Political Science
Faculty Sponsor:
Hicks, Barbara

Subjects

Genre:
bibliography   ( marcgt )
theses   ( marcgt )
government publication (state, provincial, territorial, dependent)   ( marcgt )
born-digital   ( sobekcm )
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation

Notes

Abstract:
Women’s exclusion from politics, and consequently government, has continued to undermine equal representation and cause women’s interests to be underrepresented in legislatures worldwide. In an effort to improve women’s representation, India enacted the 74th Constitutional Amendment in 1993, reserving one-third of local government (Panchayati Raj) council seats for women. In order to create lasting change the gender quotas must increase not only women’s numerical representation, but also, in the long-term, their substantive and symbolic representation. This study explores whether substantive representation has been achieved in the Panchayati Raj, and if not, what prevented it. Four key spheres of Panchayati Raj influence are examined for effects of women’s substantive representation: education, health, social attitudes, and rural development. Women’s reservation appears to have affected education and social attitudes more than health or rural government, and full substantive representation has yet to be reached. Some of the barriers to substantive representation are household responsibilities, incumbency, inegalitarian culture, economic underdevelopment, electoral systems, lack of commitment of political parties to nominate women, and prescribed gender roles. Gender quotas have also been proposed for India’s state and national parliaments through the Women’s Reservation Bill. If the upper-level quotas are implemented, it is essential to know how successful the local quotas have been, the barriers that have limited success, and whether those successes and limits would translate to a higher level of government. Although some of the experiences at the local level can foreshadow how upper-level quotas would work, substantial differences in potential female candidates and state and national parliamentary institutions suggest that upper-level quotas will raise further challenges and opportunities for women’s substantive representation.
Statement of Responsibility:
by Laura Robinson
Thesis:
Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2014
General Note:
RESTRICTED TO NCF STUDENTS, STAFF, FACULTY, AND ON-CAMPUS USE
General Note:
This bibliographic record is available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. The New College of Florida Libraries, as creator of this bibliographic record, has waived all rights to it worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law.
General Note:
Faculty Sponsor: Hicks, Barbara

Record Information

Source Institution:
New College of Florida
Holding Location:
New College of Florida
Rights Management:
Applicable rights reserved.
Classification:
S.T. 2014 R6
System ID:
AA00024795:00001

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