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El. knyga: Patriarchal Political Order: The Making and Unraveling of the Gendered Participation Gap in India

(Stanford University, California)

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Women across the Global South, and particularly in India, turn out to vote on election days but are noticeably absent from politics year-round. Why? In The Patriarchal Political Order, Soledad Artiz Prillaman combines descriptive and causal analysis of qualitative and quantitative data from more than 9,000 women and men in India to expose how coercive power structures diminish political participation for women. Prillaman unpacks how dominant men, imbued with authority from patriarchal institutions and norms, benefit from institutionalizing the household as a unitary political actor. Women vote because it serves the interests of men but stay out of politics more generally because it threatens male authority. Yet, when women come together collectively to demand access to political spaces, they become a formidable foe to the patriarchal political order. Eye-opening and inspiring, this book serves to deepen our understanding of what it means to create an inclusive democracy for all.

Why do women participate in politics less than men? This book examines the political participation of women in rural India to deepen our understanding of how to create an inclusive democracy. It demonstrates women can empower themselves through collectively demanding access to politics.

Recenzijos

'Women across much of the world increasingly turn out to vote at rates equaling men. Yet beneath this rosy headline lurks a darker reality: gender gaps in political participation remain pronounced between the vote. Prillaman skillfully unpacks this fascinating puzzle using an impressive array of multi-method evidence from India to show how men maintain patriarchal political orders. Just as skillfully, she also unearths how women can form solidary ties to combat their political exclusion. A deeply impressive, and in many respects pioneering, book that should be read by anyone interested in political behavior, collective action, gender and politics, and the politics of contemporary rural India.' Tariq Thachil, Professor of Political Science, Center for the Advanced Study of India, University of Pennsylvania 'Soledad Prillaman explores a surprising outcome: programs designed to bring women together to increase credit have the additional benefit of increasing women's networks and political participation substantially, arguably with greater ground-level effects than for some more targeted inclusion programs. She expertly shows how and why this matters, for women in India, and for more inclusive political and development outcomes around the world.' Steven Wilkinson, Nilekani Professor of India and South Asian Studies, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, Yale University

Daugiau informacijos

Exposes how coercive political power structures diminish political participation for women in India and chronicles women's pathways to power.
Part I. The Puzzle of Women's Political Participation:
1. Introduction;
2. Patriarchy, inequality, and the political lives of rural Indian women;
3.
A relational theory of women's political participation; Part II. The
Patriarchal Political Order:
4. The patriarchal political household;
5.
Political behavior under household cooperation;
6. The patriarchal political
order networks and the nature of political organization; Part III. The
Unravelling;
7. The power of autonomy from the household and women's
collective action;
8. Consciousness-raising as the ignition for collective
action; Part IV. Consequences of Inclusion:
9. Women's mobilization across
India and its portents;
10. Conclusion: political inclusion as a path to
social change.
Soledad Artiz Prillaman is an assistant professor of Political Science at Stanford University. She is also the faculty director of the Inclusive Democracy and Development Lab at Stanford. Prillaman specializes in comparative political economy, development, and gender, with a focus in South Asia.