After defeat of delimitation bill, South India must confront inequalities within
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Context
The author argues that while Southern states have successfully defended federalism against the perceived threat of a skewed delimitation process, they must now address glaring internal inequalities, particularly regarding women's representation in governance. Despite progress in social justice indicators like lower caste consumption levels, Southern states lag significantly in female political and judicial empowerment compared to national averages.
UPSC Perspectives
Polity
The debate surrounding delimitation (the act of redrawing boundaries of Lok Sabha and Assembly constituencies to represent changes in population) highlights a core tension in Indian federalism. According to , Parliament enacts a Delimitation Act after every census. However, the froze the total number of Lok Sabha seats based on the 1971 census until the first census post-2026. This freeze was intended to reward states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu that successfully implemented family planning. The author warns that unfreezing delimitation based on current populations would penalize these states, reducing their political weight and shifting power to more populous Northern states, thus threatening the federal balance. UPSC often tests this tension between demographic representation and federal equity in GS Paper 2.
Social
The article critiques the narrow definition of social justice employed by Southern political parties, which often focuses solely on caste-based redistribution and improved consumption levels. While states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu have higher consumption levels for Scheduled Castes compared to the national average, the intra-state inequality (the gap between the marginalized and the best-off) remains stark. This highlights the limitations of using consumption as the sole proxy for income distribution and well-being. Furthermore, the author points out that true empowerment must transcend resource distribution and include power-sharing. This requires a shift from a purely economic or caste-based view of social justice to an intersectional approach that addresses systemic exclusion.
Governance
The most significant internal inequality highlighted is the lack of gender parity in governance within supposedly progressive Southern states. Despite outperforming Northern states on many human development indicators, Kerala and Tamil Nadu demonstrate a glaring democratic deficit concerning women's political representation. The article notes that women comprise only 9% and 5% of the legislature in Kerala and Tamil Nadu, respectively—both below the national average. This underscores the necessity of interventions like the (Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam), which mandates a 33% reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies. The author argues that without equitable representation in law-making and the judiciary (e.g., only 8% female judges in the Kerala High Court), the narrative of Southern development remains fundamentally flawed.