Whither Women in Parliament?
by manthri.lk - Research Team posted over 10 years ago in ஆய்வறிக்கை
A previous Manthri.lk analysis revealed
that there is a double problem for women’s representation in parliament. The
first is that women constitute a very small percentage in parliament (5.8%).
The second is that their total contribution in parliament is much less than
even that small percentage (2.6%).
Is this because
women limit themselves to just a few topics, or do they contribute well below
their weight across the board?
Women’s contribution is widespread: Of the 42 topics classified by Manthri.lk women have participated
in 36 (86% of the topics) from May 2012 to April 2014.
Wide, but shallow: Women’s
contribution exceed their parliamentary weight of 5.8%, only in two of these
topics (see Exhibit 1). In all the other topics women are contributing below
their parliamentary weight.
Being
a Minister makes a difference: Three of the top
five topics are driven by women parliamentarians holding ministerial positions.
Pavithra Wanniarachchi is the Minister of Power and Energy; Nirupama Rajapaksha
is the Deputy Minister of Water Supply and Drainage; and Sumedha Jayasena is
the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs. The women Ministers outdo the other
women parliamentarians in their Ministerial subjects. But they don’t outdo all
the men. They rank 4th, 12th and 13th
respectively in their Ministerial topics in parliament (Exhibit 2).
The two other
topics in the top 5 are somewhat predictable: “Women, Children and Elders’
Rights” and “Youth Affairs”. How would you interpret this data? Why are women
MPs failing to make a stronger contribution in parliament: are they less
competent or do they have less opportunity? Your thoughts and questions are welcome at
www.manthri.lk/en/blog; or by text to the manthri.lk hotline: 071-4639882.
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