“Women’s political participation is the surest indicator of democracy’s depth.” – UN Women.
CSOs and women’s rights groups have played a pivotal role in mobilizing, training, and advocacy for women’s political empowerment.
Contributions of Civil Society Groups
Advocacy for Legislative Reforms – Eg- National Alliance for Women’s Reservation Bill (NAWRB) mobilized multi-party support for the 128th Constitutional Amendment (2023).
Political Education – Conduct capacity-building programs to train women in political leadership, campaigning, and governance. Eg- Sakhi Resource Centre (Kerala)
Building Networks – Create coalitions and forums to amplify women’s collective voice in politics. Eg- National Alliance of Women (NAWO)
Promoting Gender Sensitization within Parties to reform candidate selection processes and promote internal gender quotas.
Electoral Mobilization – Run voter education drives to increase women’s turnout and encourage women candidates.
Research and Documentation – Eg- Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) publishes gender-disaggregated election data to expose gaps in representation.
Grassroots-to-Legislature Leadership Pipeline – Supported Panchayat women leaders to transition into state politics.
Increased political visibility and legitimacy of women’s issues in policy spaces.
Challenges
Patriarchal Political Culture – Party hierarchies resist internal reforms and tokenize women leaders.
Resource Constraints – Civil society campaigns depend on donor funding and lack long-term institutional backing.
Fragmentation – Lack of unified women’s coalition across regions and ideologies.
Limited Media Coverage – Women’s political work underreported compared to male counterparts.
Token Representation – symbolic presence without real decision power. Eg- Sarpanch Pati
Regulatory Hurdles – Strict FCRA and compliance norms restrict civil society operations.
Socio-Cultural Barriers – Family opposition and traditional gender roles deter active participation.
Way Forward
Early implementation of Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam
Joint CSO-government programs to train women politicians.
Formal Party-CSO Dialogue Platforms to improve women’s candidate representation.
Intersectional Inclusion – Target programs for Dalit, tribal, and minority women.
This can strengthen Civil society to transform women from voters to legislators, ensuring inclusive and participatory democracy.