Gender and Political Participation in Pakistan: A Comparative Study with India
Keywords:
Gender and Politics, Political Participation, Pakistan, India, Reserved Seats, Panchayati Raj InstitutionsAbstract
This article presents a comparative analysis of gender and political participation in Pakistan and India, examining how divergent institutional mechanisms interact with shared patriarchal contexts to shape women's descriptive and substantive representation. Employing a qualitative comparative case study design, the research draws on historical analysis, policy documents, and recent empirical studies to trace the trajectories of women's political participation in both countries since 1947. The findings reveal that while patriarchal social norms constitute a common foundational barrier, Pakistan's system of reserved seats in national and provincial assemblies and India's constitutional quotas in local Panchayati Raj Institutions have produced significantly different patterns of women's political engagement. Pakistan achieves approximately 20 percent women's representation in parliament through reserved seats, yet women legislators face constraints including party dependence, lack of constituencies, and implementation gaps that limit substantive influence. India's grassroots quota experiment has generated approximately 1.4 million elected women representatives, yet intersecting hierarchies of caste, class, and patriarchy, manifesting in phenomena such as sarpanch pati, constrain the translation of presence into power. The article argues that the key distinction lies in the level at which affirmative action operates and the consequent possibilities for women to develop political agency through practice and constituency relationships, with implications for policy reform in both countries.


