Irfan Nooruddin: 'Much to be gained by having more women in India's highest parliamentary body'
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Issued on: 17/04/2026 - 12:00Modified: 17/04/2026 - 12:19
08:41 min Share Play (08:41 min) From the showFrançois Picard is pleased to welcome Irfan Nooruddin, the Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Indian Politics in the Asian Studies Program in the School of Foreign Service. As a scholar of Indian politics, he approaches institutional reform not as a question of isolated policy change, but as a reconfiguration of incentives within a vast and uneven federal democracy. He examines the interlinked dynamics shaping India’s political future, including the normative promise and practical limits of women’s representation
While reforms carry genuine transformative potential, they are embedded within party structures that mediate their impact. Similarly, debates over representation are not merely technical adjustments but reflect deeper tensions between demographic change, federal equity, and political power. What is at stake is not only who gets represented, but how representation itself is defined in a country of continental scale.
Nooruddin argues there is 'much to be gained by having more women in India's highest parliamentary body."
'"Extensive scholarly research demonstrates," explains Nooruddin, "where women are empowered, women's issues tend to be taken more seriously, violence against women tends to go down and also tends to get reported and taken more seriously by the police."
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