To The Point
For Mains: Impact of Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 on promoting inclusivity in the democracy, making it more participative and eliminating gender gap in the long run.
What is the Women's Reservation Act, 2023?
- About:
- The Constitution (106 th Amendment) Act, 2023, reserves one-third of all seats for women in Lok Sabha, State legislative assemblies, and the Legislative Assembly of the National Capital Territory of Delhi, including those reserved forSCs and STs.
- The reservation will be effective after the publication of the census conducted following the Act’s commencement and endures for a 15-year period, with potential extension determined by parliamentary action.
- The rotation of seats allocated for women will be governed by parliamentary legislation after each delimitation process.
- Currently, around 15% of the total members of the 17th Lok Sabha (2019-2024) are women while in state legislative assemblies, women on average constitute 9% of the total members.
- The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, 1979 mandates the eradication of gender-based discrimination in political and public spheres, with India being a signatory.
- Despite progress, the representation of women in decision-making bodies remains relatively low, increasing from 5% in the first Lok Sabha to 15% in the 17 th Lok Sabha.
- The first three Bills(1996, 1998, 1999) expired when their respective Lok Sabhas dissolved.
- The 2008 Bill was introduced in and approved by the Rajya Sabha but also lapsed when the 15th Lok Sabha dissolved.
- However, in the present case, it will require adherence to the“Triple Test” laid down by the Supreme Court.

- The 1996 Bill underwent examination by a Joint Committee of Parliament, while the 2008 Bill was scrutinized by the Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law, and Justice.
- Both committees endorsed the idea of seat reservations for women. Some of their recommendations included:
- considering reservations for women from other backward classes OBCs) at an appropriate time
- implementing reservations for a 15-year period with subsequent reviews
- devising a plan for reserving seats for women in the Rajya Sabha and state legislative councils.
Issue of Triple Test:
- Government sources said that reservations for women would require clearing the "triple test".
- In 2010, the Supreme Court held that backwardness with relation to local bodies has to be “political” – such as underrepresentation in politics. It may differ from “social and educational backwardness”, which is used to grant reservations for seats in educational institutions or government jobs.
- The Supreme Court, while deciding on the legality of OBC reservations in Maharashtra local body elections, in a verdict in 2021, had set out a three-fold test that state governments have to follow to provide these reservations.
- First, the state was mandated to set up a dedicated commission to examine backwardness in local bodies within the state.
- Second, states were required to determine the size of the quota based on the commission survey data.
- Third, these reservations, combined with Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes quotas, could not be more than 50% of the total seats in the local body.
- However, such a “triple test” is not applied to political reservations for SC/STs, since the reservation in elections applies under Article 334.
- The “triple test” for representation of SC/STs “only applies in the case of quota for promotions in government employment.”

What are Different Committees and Their Reports on the Issue?
- 1971 Committee on the Status of Women in India (CSWI):
- It was created in response to a request from the UN for a report on the status of women ahead of International Women’s Year, 1975.
- Set up by the erstwhile Ministry of Education and Social Welfare.
- It examined the constitutional, administrative, and legal provisions that have a bearing on the social status of women, their education, and employment — and the impact of these provisions.
- It published the report - ‘Towards Equality’ as per which, the Indian state had failed in its constitutional responsibility to ensure gender equality.
- Following this, several states began announcing reservations for women in local bodies.
- In 1987, the government constituted a 14-member committee under then Union Minister Margaret Alva.
- In 1988, the committee presented the National Perspective Plan for Women 1988-2000 to the Prime Minister.
- Among the committee’s 353 recommendations was the reservation of seats for women in elected bodies.
- In 1992, the 73 rd and 74 th Constitutional Amendment Acts were introduced under the Prime Ministership of P V Narasimha Rao.
- It was the doing of the National Perspective Plan for Women that mandated the reservation of 1/3 rd of seats for women (via 73 rd and 74 th Amendments) in Panchayati Raj institutions (PRIs) and offices of the chairperson at all levels of PRIs, and in urban local bodies respectively.
- Many States such as Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Kerala have made legal provisions to ensure 50% reservation for women in local bodies.
First Women’s Reservation Bill
- On September 12, 1996, the Government of India tabled 81 st ConstitutionalAmendment Bill which sought to reserve 1/3rd of seats for women in Parliament and state legislatures.
- However, many MPs, especially those belonging to the OBCs, opposed the Bill.
- Consequently, the bill was sent to a Select Committee of Parliament headed by Geeta Mukherjee.
- Geeta Mukherjee Committee 1996:
- The Committee had 21 members from LS and 10 from RS.
- The panel noted that seats for women had been reserved within the SC/ST quotas, but there was no such benefit for OBC women because there is no provision for OBC reservation.
- It recommended that the government “may consider…extending…reservation to OBCs also at the appropriate time so that the women belonging to OBCs will also get the benefit of reservation”.
- In 2013, the Ministry of Women and Child Development constituted a committee on the status of women, which recommended ensuring at least 50% reservation of seats for women in the Local bodies, State Legislative Assemblies, Parliament, Ministerial levels and all decision‐making bodies of the government.
Present Status of Women Representation
- As per theWorld Economic Forum (WEF)’s Global Gender Gap Report 2023, India has made strides in political empowerment, achieving 25.3% parity in this domain.
- Women represent 15.1% of parliamentarians, which is the highest representation since the inaugural report in 2006.
What is Status of Women’s Reservation in Panchayats and ULBs?
- Women’s Reservation - Initiatives and Current Data
- Early Initiatives:
- In 1985, the state government of Karnataka implemented 25% reservation for women in Mandal Praja Parishads with a sub-quota for scheduled caste and scheduled tribe women, becoming the first state to do so.
- In 1987, the erstwhile united Andhra Pradesh implemented 9%reservation for women in gram panchayats.
- In 1991, Odisha affected 33% reservation for women in Panchayats.
- The 1992 Constitutional amendment made this quota national, and inserted a 33% sub-quota for scheduled caste and scheduled tribe women.
- In 1992, following the recommendations of the National Perspective Plan for Women 1988-2000, the 73 rd and 74 th Amendment Acts (1992) mandated the reservation of 1/3 rd of seats for women in Panchayati Raj institutions (PRIs) and in urban local bodies.
- ‘Panchayat’, being “Local government”, is a State subject and part of the State list of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India.
- Article 243D of the Constitution ensures participation of women in PRIs by mandating atleast 1/3rd reservation for women out of total number of seats to be filled by direct election and number of offices of chairpersons of Panchayats.
Status In Different States
- States with >50% Reservation:
- According to government data, as of Sept 2021, in at least 18 states, the percentage of women elected representatives in PRIs was more than 50%:
- Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh, Assam, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Kerala, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Rajasthan, Manipur, Telangana, Sikkim, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh.
- These 18 states, including Gujarat and Kerala have also made legal provisions for 50% reservation for women in PRIs.
- Lowest - Uttar Pradesh (33.34%)
- Overall percentage in India - 45.61%
- In April 2023, Nagaland was amid controversies regarding the reservation of seats for women in urban local body (ULB) polls.
- The issue centers around the Nagaland Municipal Act of 2001, which mandated a 33% reservation for women in ULB polls (as per 74th amendment).
- Many traditional tribal and urban organizations opposed it, arguing that it would violate the special provisions granted by Article 371A.
- Their apex tribal body argues that women have traditionally not been part of decision-making bodies.
- Nagaland is the only state where ULB seats are not reserved for women.
What is Status of Women’s Reservation in Services in Different States?
- Women’s Reservation and Horizontal Reservation:
- The Constitution of India does not expressly permit reservation for women in public employment. On the contrary, Article 16(2) prohibits discrimination in public employment on the ground of sex.
- Therefore, women can, at best, be provided only horizontal and not vertical reservation on the basis of the Supreme Court’s pronouncement in the famousIndra Sawhney’s case (1992).
- Horizontal Reservation refers to the equal opportunity provided to categories of beneficiaries such as women, veterans, the transgender community, and individuals with disabilities, cutting through the vertical categories.
- The horizontal quota is applied separately to each vertical category, and not across the board.
- For example, if women have 50% horizontal quota, then half of the selected candidates will have to necessarily be women in each vertical quota category i.e., half of all selected Scheduled Caste candidates will have to be women, half of the unreserved or general category will have to be women, and so on.
- Uttarakhand:
- In 2006, Uttarakhand state government issued an order ensuring 30% horizontal reservation for women candidates in the state. This reservation was for public employment exclusively to state-domiciled women.
- In August 2022, the High Court of Uttarakhand stayed this order. However, in Nov 2022, the Supreme Court allowed the government to continue with its 16-year-old decision and stayed a HC order that had opened up the quota for women from anywhere in India.
- In January 2023, the government again came out with an ordinance to continue with the provisions of the reservation.
- In 2022, the Karnataka government reserved 33% for outsourced women employees in all the departments.
- As per the circular, the state government recruits data entry operators, housekeeping staff and other group D employees, drivers through outsourcing.
- The 33% reservation is applicable for all autonomous bodies, universities, urban local bodies, and other government offices.
- In 2022, on the occasion of Women's Day, Tripura govt has announced its decision to give a reservation of 33% to all women for any state govt job, or for higher educational institutions.
- In 2020, the Punjab state govt approved 33% reservation for women in direct recruitment for the Punjab Civil Services, boards and corporations.
- The 'Punjab Civil Services (Reservation of Posts for Women) Rules, 2020' provided such reservation for women for direct recruitment to posts in government, as well as in recruitment to Boards and Corporations in Group A, B, C, and D posts.
- In 2016, the state cabinet granted 35% reservation to women in all government jobs.
- Earlier, the state govt also made a provision for a reservation of 35% for women in the recruitment of police constabulary in the state.
Representation of Women in Other Sectors
- Governance:
- India has had one woman prime minister and two female presidents since independence in 1947.
- Fifteen women have served as chief ministers so far.
- India's Supreme Court has not had a single female chief justice so far.
- As of August 2023, there were three women judges in the apex court of a sanctioned strength of 34, 106 women judges out of 788 in the 25 high courts and 7,199 in the lower courts.
- Justice BV Nagarathna is in line to become the first woman Chief Justice of India in 2027.
- As of March 2023, there were 6,993 women officers in the Indian army, 748 in the navy. The strength of women officers in the Indian Air Force stood at 1,636, excluding medical staff.
- Women constitute 11.7% of the 2.1 million-strong police force.
- India has the highest proportion of female pilots to males in the world, making up 15% out of a total of about 10,000 pilots in the South Asian country, against 5% globally.
- With 62.9% female participation, agriculture has the highest percentage of women workers, followed by manufacturing, at 11.2% in 2022.
- Millions of Indian women are employed in unorganised sectors such as domestic and daily wage labourers.
- Women accounted for 18.2% of board seats at NIFTY 500 companies in 2023, with the life sciences sector reporting the highest female representation on boards at 24%.
- The tech industry has a high representation of women in the workforce at 34% but lags behind other industries when it comes to women in executive positions. There are 8.9% of firms with women in top managerial posts.
What are the Issues Related to Delimitation?
- Will come into effect after the Delimitation:
- The reservation shall come into effect only after delimitation is undertaken and delimitation will be undertaken only after the relevant figures of the next census are published.
- The 2021 Census that was postponed because of the Covid pandemic and several other reasons has been further pushed to 2024-25 until further orders.
- The Union Home Minister explained that the decision to implement reservation after delimitation is to ensure that a quasi-judicial body like the Delimitation Commission can decide which seats to reserve, after public consultation.
- The Law Minister claimed that it was against the provisions of the Constitution to provide reservation immediately, noting that someone may challenge it in a court of law. And the government will not allow the Act to get stuck in some technicality.
- According to rough estimates, the country's population has increased by about 30 percent since the last census in 2011. Therefore, the seats in the Lok Sabha will also increase in the same proportion.
- It is expected that there will be an increase of about 210 seats over the 543 seats in the current Lok Sabha. That means the total seats would likely be around 753.
Previous Delimitation Exercises