Author(s)

Mukta Chaturvedi, Dr. Ashish Jorasia

  • Manuscript ID: 120079
  • Volume 2, Issue 2, Feb 2026
  • Pages: 56–64

Subject Area: Public Administration and Policy

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18454437
Abstract

Women’s participation in local governance has been one of the most significant socio-political changes in post-independence India, particularly after the enactment of the 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act of 1992. The amendment mandated a one-third reservation for women in Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), thereby ensuring their numerical representation in grassroots democracy. While this has undoubtedly increased women’s presence in decision-making forums, the deeper question remains whether this numerical inclusion translates into actual power and transformative participation. This paper explores this complex dynamic in the context of Kota District in Rajasthan, a region marked by both traditional social structures and emerging shifts in gender relations.
The central objective of this research is to examine how women in PRIs in Kota move from mere presence to positions of substantive and transformative power. The study develops a three-tiered analytical framework distinguishing between descriptive representation (numerical presence), substantive representation (policy influence and outcomes), and transformative representation (changes in gender norms, institutional practices, and power relations). By applying this framework to the Kota District, the research identifies enabling and constraining factors that shape women’s journey from presence to power.
Methodologically, this study adopts a mixed-methods approach, combining quantitative and qualitative tools. Electoral data and administrative records were analyzed to trace patterns of women’s representation and resource allocation. In contrast, semi-structured interviews with elected women representatives (EWRs), community members, and local officials provided rich insights into lived experiences. Document reviews, including Gram Sabha minutes and social audit reports, further contextualized these findings.
The results reveal that while reservation policies have succeeded in dramatically increasing the presence of women, substantive and transformative outcomes remain uneven. On one hand, many EWRs have prioritized developmental projects such as water access, sanitation, education, and maternal health—reflecting gendered priorities that directly benefit communities. On the other hand, barriers such as patriarchal norms, proxy leadership by male relatives, limited control over financial resources, caste-based discrimination, and lack of adequate training often undermine women’s independent authority. These challenges highlight the gap between formal inclusion and actual empowerment.
Yet, the study also uncovers encouraging signs of change. In certain Gram Panchayats, women leaders with repeated electoral victories have gradually built independent legitimacy, expanded their decision-making power, and mobilized women’s groups for collective action. Their leadership has not only improved local governance outcomes but has also contributed to shifting community perceptions about women’s roles in public life. Incremental changes, such as women speaking more confidently in Gram Sabhas, engaging with government officials, and initiating local savings or self-help groups, indicate the beginnings of transformative participation.
The Kota case study demonstrates that transformative participation is possible but conditional. It depends on a synergy of institutional reforms, targeted capacity-building, civil society engagement, and community-level norm shifts. Quotas are a critical first step, but sustainable empowerment requires continuous support and structural changes. The paper concludes by recommending interventions that strengthen women’s financial autonomy, institutionalize long-term training and mentoring, reduce proxy governance, and encourage inclusive political participation across caste and class lines. By highlighting both the progress made and the challenges that remain, this study contributes to broader debates on gender, governance, and democratic deepening in India.

Keywords
Panchayati Raj InstitutionsWomen’s ParticipationTransformative RepresentationLocal GovernanceKota District