Women in Politics and the Subject of Reservations
Published By: CWDS on eSS | Published Date: August , 2017This paper, however, demonstrates
that the effective history of thinking about political representation in the
form of reservations for women is as old as the women’s movement itself.
Feminist engagements with the political domain became caught up within
dynamics that grew out of the specific dilemmas and contradictions of
political representation, and shifted across time from the colonial, to post
independence and the more contemporary period after the 1990s, that is elsewhere designated as “postnational” (John 2014). It is surely rather
paradoxical to witness a stronger feminist desire to inhabit the legislative
apparatus of the state in its colonial and present day ‘neo-liberal’ forms than in the heyday of national development. On the face of it, one would
have surely imagined the opposite to be the case. At the same time, certain
continuities are also in evidence from the colonial era to the contemporary
interest in women’s political representation, which coalesced around the
repeated problem of a conflict between conceptions of women’s political
rights and rights based on minority status and caste. [CWDS Occasional Paper 62].
Author(s): Mary E. John | Posted on: Sep 28, 2017 | Views() | Download (563)