Performing Representation
Women Members in the Indian Parliament
Shirin M. Rai and Carole Spary
Author Information
Shirin M Rai, Professor, Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Warwick,Carole Spary, Assistant Professor, School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham
Shirin M. Rai is Professor in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick, UK. She has written extensively on issues of gender, governance and development in academic journals and her latest books include New Frontiers in Feminist Political Economy ; Democracy in Practice: Ceremony and Ritual in Parliament (ed.), and The Grammar of Politics and Performance (eds. with Janelle Reinelt). She has consulted with the United Nations' Division for the Advancement of Women and UNDP. She is a founder member of the South Asia Research Network on Gender, Law and Governance, and she was Director of the Leverhulme Trust programme on Gendered Ceremony and Ritual in Parliament (2007-2011). She is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and an executive committee member of the International Political Science Association. She has also been a Visiting Professorial Fellow at the Gender Institute, London School of Economics (2012 -2015), and is Honorary Adjunct
Professor, Department of International Studies, Monash University (2014-) and Ford Visiting Professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. She has a PhD from University of Cambridge.
Carole Spary is Assistant Professor at the School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham, UK. Prior to this she was Lecturer in Politics at the University of York (2011-2014) and Leverhulme Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Warwick (2008-2011). She has published on democratic politics and development, particularly gender, development, political representation and political institutions in India, including journal articles on women's political leadership in India and candidate nomination in elections, a comparative study of first female Speakers, and on disruption and ethno-linguistic representation in the Indian parliament. She has also written on gender, development and the state in India, and she teaches on gender and development and Asian politics. She has guest edited two
special issues of the journals Democratisation and Contemporary South Asia. She was the convenor of the Politics of South Asia Specialist Group of the UK's Political Studies Association from 2008-2016, and is the Deputy Director of the Institute of Asia and Pacific Studies, at the University of Nottingham. She has a PhD from the University of Bristol.
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