Overview
The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023, also known as the Women’s Reservation Act, marks a significant constitutional reform aimed at ensuring 33 percent reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies.
Despite its passage in 2023, its implementation remains deferred due to linkage with Census and delimitation, raising important constitutional and political questions.
India’s Position and Historical Background
Women’s political representation in India remains relatively low:
- Around 15 percent representation in Lok Sabha
- Significantly lower than countries like Rwanda at about 61 percent and Sweden at around 46 percent
The demand for women’s reservation has a long legislative history:
- First introduced in 1996
- Passed in Rajya Sabha in 2010, but lapsed
- Finally enacted in 2023 after decades of debate
Implementation Framework and Delay
The Act does not come into force immediately. Its implementation is conditional upon:
- Conduct of the next Census
- Completion of delimitation of constituencies
Expected Timeline
- Census expected around 2027
- Data processing may take 12 to 18 months
- Delimitation process may take 3 to 6 years
This pushes actual implementation to approximately 2033–34, making it a long-term reform rather than an immediate one.
Structural and Political Factors Behind Delay
Protection of Sitting Representatives
Immediate implementation would require reserving about 183 out of 543 Lok Sabha seats, potentially displacing current MPs.
Expansion Strategy
Delimitation may increase total seats in Lok Sabha, possibly up to around 888, allowing reservation to be implemented without removing existing members.
Regional and Social Concerns
North–South Imbalance
States like Kerala and Tamil Nadu, which have controlled population growth, fear losing representation to higher-growth states like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar after delimitation.
Limited Institutional Coverage
The Act applies only to:
- Lok Sabha
- State Legislative Assemblies
It excludes:
- Rajya Sabha
- State Legislative Councils
Absence of OBC Sub-Quota
While SC and ST women are covered within reservation, OBC women lack a dedicated quota, despite forming a large demographic segment.
Rotation of Seats
Frequent rotation of reserved constituencies may affect continuity and long-term political development of women leaders.
Constitutional Dimension
The delay raises questions about the balance between:
- Formal equality versus substantive equality
- Procedural requirements versus immediate political empowerment
Some argue that Article 15(3), which allows special provisions for women, could enable earlier implementation without waiting for delimitation.
Way Forward
- Decouple implementation from delimitation and operationalise reservation earlier
- Consider reservation within existing constituencies
- Explore incremental seat expansion to balance representation and political stability
- Introduce sub-quotas for OBC women for broader inclusivity
Conclusion
The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam represents a transformative step toward gender-inclusive governance. However, its delayed implementation risks reducing its impact to a symbolic reform.
Without timely execution, the promise of political empowerment remains deferred, and substantive gender equality in legislative institutions continues to be postponed rather than realised.