This paper analyzes the transformation of women’s rights in India between 2023 and 2026, emphasizing the transition from legislative articulation to institutional implementation. Anchored in the Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 (Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam), the analysis explores the development of a structural framework for women’s political representation. By integrating constitutional analysis, governance mechanisms, and socio-economic indicators—including the 2027 Census process, delimitation debates, and gender-responsive budgeting—the study evaluates whether India’s model of “women-led development” leads to substantive empowerment or remains dependent on administrative execution. The analysis adopts a qualitative and policy-oriented methodology supported by secondary data from government reports and scholarly literature. It argues that although India has established a strong legal foundation for gender parity, the realization of transformative outcomes depends on institutional coordination, sustained political commitment, and structural reforms within governance systems.
Dr. Madhalli Iravva Tippanna (Wed,) studied this question.