Women-Led Local Bodies Show Higher Transparency, Accountability: Harivansh

Rajya Sabha Deputy Chairman Harivansh highlighted India's extensive experience with women's participation in its three-tier governance system at a Commonwealth conference. He noted that constitutional amendments mandating reservations have led to nearly 1.5 million women serving in local bodies, creating the world's largest experiment in women's political representation. Studies show these women-led bodies demonstrate higher transparency, closer monitoring, and stronger accountability, improving service delivery on issues like water and healthcare. The recent 106th Constitutional Amendment, reserving seats for women in Parliament, marks a further milestone in India's commitment to gender-balanced representation.

Key Points: Women in Local Governance Boost Transparency & Accountability

  • 1.5 million women serve in local bodies
  • 73rd & 74th Amendments mandated reservation
  • Focus shifts to women-led development
  • 106th Amendment for Parliament reservation
  • Local bodies as entry to public life
4 min read

Women-led local bodies demonstrate higher levels of transparency, closer monitoring and stronger accountability: Rajya Sabha Deputy Chairman

Rajya Sabha Deputy Chairman highlights how women's participation in India's three-tier governance system strengthens democracy and improves outcomes.

"women-led local bodies demonstrate higher levels of transparency, closer monitoring and stronger accountability - Harivansh"

New Delhi, January 17

Rajya Sabha Deputy Chairman Harivansh addressed the Lightning Round Session of the 28th Conference of Speakers and Presiding Officers of the Commonwealth, held here on the theme 'Women's Contribution to India's Three-Tier System of Governance' and said women-led local bodies demonstrate higher levels of transparency, closer monitoring and stronger accountability.

Addressing the delegates, Deputy Chairman shared India's lived experience of women's participation in governance across its three-tier democratic framework comprising Parliament at the Union level, State Legislatures and Local Self-Government institutions.

He noted that this framework is based on vertical power-sharing among the Centre, States and grassroots institutions and has acquired global significance due to the constitutional and institutional inclusion of women, particularly at the local level.

The Deputy Chairman observed that India's experience demonstrates how women's participation strengthens democratic legitimacy and improves governance outcomes. He stated that India's journey of women's political participation is deeply rooted in its civilisational ethos, where deliberative assemblies and collective decision-making have historically witnessed meaningful participation by women.

Referring to India's constitutional evolution, the Deputy Chairman noted that women were enfranchised in several provinces as early as the 1920s, much before Independence. With the adoption of universal adult franchise in 1950, India took a bold and progressive step by ensuring political equality from the very inception of the Republic.

The Deputy Chairman further stated that the commitment to gender equality was deepened through the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments in the early 1990s, which mandated one-third reservation for women in rural and urban local bodies. He observed that this provision has since been enhanced to 50 per cent reservation in rural local bodies by over two-thirds of States, and by nearly half the States in urban local bodies.

Highlighting the scale of women's participation, the Deputy Chairman referred to the observations made by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and noted that nearly 1.5 million women currently serve as elected representatives in local self-governing bodies. He described this as the largest experiment in women's political representation anywhere in the world.

Harivansh observed that for many women, particularly from rural and marginalised sections of society, local bodies serve as the first point of entry into public life. This unprecedented scale of participation, he noted, has begun translating into tangible improvements in the quality of local governance.

He highlighted that studies and field experience indicate that "women-led local bodies demonstrate higher levels of transparency, closer monitoring and stronger accountability". He noted that due to their close engagement with communities, leakages are often reduced and the benefits of government programmes and schemes reach intended beneficiaries more effectively.

Referring to governance priorities, the Deputy Chairman stated that women leaders have consistently focused on issues such as safe drinking water, sanitation, primary healthcare, education, nutrition and social welfare delivery. He observed that with increasing participation of women across all three tiers of governance, the emphasis has gradually shifted from women's development to women-led development.

He noted that women's participation in local governance has challenged traditional gender roles and created a large pool of experienced women leaders who move on to State Legislatures and the national Parliament. He observed that many such leaders have gone on to serve as Ministers, Speakers, Chief Ministers and Presiding Officers, including in the highest constitutional offices of the country.

Referring to recent constitutional reforms, the Deputy Chairman stated that the passage of the 106th Constitutional Amendment, the 'Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam', marks a significant milestone by providing 33 per cent reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies. He described this as a reaffirmation of India's long-term commitment to gender balance in parliamentary representation.

Summarising key lessons from India's experience, the Deputy Chairman observed that local governance provides a sustainable entry point for women's leadership; that diversity and scale are not barriers to inclusion; and that women's leadership improves governance outcomes, rather than merely improving representation statistics.

For the Commonwealth, the Deputy Chairman stated, India's experience reinforces the shared conviction that inclusive parliaments are stronger parliaments, and that democracies flourish when women participate as equal partners in governance.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Absolutely true from what I've seen. The female sarpanch in our block is far more accessible than the previous ones. She holds regular jan sunwais (public hearings) and the accounts for the PMAY houses are displayed on the gram panchayat board. Transparency is visibly better.
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Aman W
While the intent and the data are good, we must ensure these positions are not just proxies for their husbands or male relatives ("sarpanch pati"). True empowerment means independent decision-making. The article mentions this shift to women-led development, which is the real goal.
S
Sarah B
As an observer of Indian democracy, this is a fascinating case study. 1.5 million women in local governance is a staggering number. The focus on water, health, and education aligns with what communities actually need. Other democracies should take note.
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Karthik V
The point about leakages reducing is crucial. When my mother, a ward member, was in charge of the ration shop oversight, irregularities dropped significantly. They have a personal stake in the community's welfare. Hope the 106th Amendment gets implemented smoothly at the national level.
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Nisha Z
It's heartening to see this recognition. My bua (aunt) is a nagar palika member. Her work on waste segregation and public toilet maintenance is day and night. She's more accountable because people directly approach her at home. This is India's grassroots democratic strength.

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