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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 January 2025
We examine how political participation and political competition are shaped by two class-based extensions of the franchise in twentieth-century India. Creating a new dataset of district-level political outcomes between 1920 and 1957, we find that both the partial franchise extension of 1935 and the universal suffrage reform of 1950 led to limited increases in citizen participation as voters or candidates, and neither reform had a significant effect on increasing political competition. Despite the limited effects on political outcomes, districts with greater enfranchisement increases experienced higher education provision by provincial governments.
We thank three anonymous referees, Latika Chaudhary, Dan Keniston, Akshay Mangla, Nicola Persico, Meg Rithmire, and seminar and conference participants at several universities for helpful comments and suggestions. We are thankful to Latika Chaudhary and Francesca Jensenius for their immense generosity with data sharing, and to Paradigm Data Services and the Trivedi Center for Political Data (Ashoka University) for excellent research assistance. Guilhem Cassan and Rinchan Ali Mirza gratefully acknowledge financial support of the FNRS, through the Mandat d’Impulsion Scientifique “Democratisation in Colonial India.” This work was financially supported by the Excellence of Science (EOS) Research project of FNRS O020918F.