589 CAPISTRANO WAY
STANFORD, CA 94305

Soledad Artiz Prillaman: "Family Politics: Collective Governance and Women's Political Representation in Rural India”
Electoral quotas for women are the most common institutional solution to the problem of political gender inequality today, but widespread qualitative evidence from India – home to the largest such quota policy – suggests that men can co-opt these institutions. Professor Prillaman measured actual and perceived political authority using data from elected officials and their families, bureaucrats, and citizens across two states and more than 6,000 respondents in rural India. The data reveals that local Indian politics, across the board, is a family affair. Unlike typical conceptions of representative democracy, she documents how local governance tasks are collectively shared between elected representatives and their family members in both male and female-led localities. However, female representatives have significantly less political authority than male representatives. Prillaman provides suggestive evidence that this authority gap derives from resource inequalities and patriarchal decision-making. She further shows that women's political authority is associated with citizen political behavior. These findings have implications for our understanding of democratic accountability and representation.
Soledad Artiz Prillaman is Assistant Professor of Political Science.
Clayman Faculty Affiliates are welcome to attend the lunch seminars. All Stanford academics are eligible to become Clayman Institute Faculty Affiliates. Please RSVP to Lea Gottlieb (lgottlie [at] stanford.edu (lgottlie[at]stanford[dot]edu)) if you wish to attend.