User:Kiaana.pr/Women's Participation in Bangladesh Politics

= Women's participation in Bangladesh Politics = Women's participation in political decision-making is critical for both achieving gender equity and promoting development. However, Bangladeshi women face a double marginalization: they hold a subordinate position in all aspects of life, and even within the political sphere, their influence is minimal. Understanding this marginalization requires examining the extent of women's and men's participation across various institutions. Traditional societal divisions between public and private spheres significantly restrict women's involvement in political processes. Consequently, few Bangladeshi women hold leadership positions in central and local governments, or even within administrative structures. This lack of access to decision-making positions translates to minimal impact on policy development, management, and implementation. Increasing women's role in decision-making is therefore crucial for their empowerment and for achieving broader societal progress.

Overview of Women's Participation in Politics
A significant step towards women's public inclusion came with the 1976 Union Parishad Ordinance, reserving two seats for women in each local council. This quota subsequently rose to three in 1983, followed by another amendment in 1997 allowing for three directly elected women representatives per union. Similarly, parliamentary quotas have grown, reaching 45 out of 345 total seats.

Bangladesh's unicameral parliament (Jatiya Sangsad) offers universal adult suffrage. Women participate in national and local politics. At the national level, they contribute to law and policymaking, while local government focuses on development implementation. While men and women share equal voting rights and eligibility for the 300 general seats, an additional 50 seats are reserved for women (introduced by the 15th constitutional amendment in 2011). These are allocated proportionally based on each party's electoral performance. However, women remain underrepresented in the cabinet which is 13.64%. While women actively vote, their participation in contesting and winning elections lags far behind men. Additionally, women are often assigned "soft issue" ministerial roles like social welfare or education, health and family planning, cultural affairs, primary education, and so forth.

Women hold leadership positions in education, legal professions (though less in legal practice and the judiciary), development, and NGOs. Yet, female involvement diminishes at lower levels of party hierarchies, suggesting difficulties in climbing the political ladder. Despite progress, women continue to face subordination in many aspects of Bangladeshi politics.

= Female Political Leader =


 * Sheikh Hasina
 * Begum Khaleda Zia
 * Dipu Moni
 * Matia Chowdhury
 * Shirin Sharmin Choudhury

= Non-profit Organizations =


 * Grameen Bank
 * BRAC (Organization)
 * The Manusher Jonno Foundation
 * Taranga
 * Bangladesh Women's Foundation
 * Proshika