Political Participation of Dalits in India
Contents: Preface. 1. Political Participation for Dalits: An Introduction. 2. Socio Political Empowerment of scheduled castes through Panchayati Raj. 3. The prospects of Dalit culture among the forms of social power. 4. Dalit Assertion and democratic Transition. 5. The emerging Dalit Theology. 6. The Dalit Women’s Movement in India. 7. Communalism Caste and Reservations. 8. The Bahujan Samaj Party in North India: No Longer Just a Dalit Party. 9. Ethnic Mobilization towards Democracy and Autonomy. 10. Opening spaces: Power, Participation and Plural Democracy at the World Social Forum. 11. Politics and Mobilization of Lower Classes. Bibliography. Index.
Dalits in India, officially termed scheduled castes, form the largest discriminated community. Their discrimination is based, first, on their descent or birth into specific untouchable castes, and secondly, on their traditional polluting work. As a result, although almost one in five Indians is a Dalit, half of whom are women, their political participation as a large minority community in India remains disproportionately low. Looking specifically at Dalit Women, the current Indian Lower House of Parliament has only 12 Dalit women MPs, a mere 22% of Parliamentarians. In its consideration of the Government of India’s report in 2007, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination noted its concern over the under representation of Dalits in all levels of government.