-
Main menu
- Sign in
This draft has been prepared as a preliminary scaffold for an IndiaWiki article on the subject titled Dinesh Shinde, who is identified within the cohort of politician. It is intended strictly as an internal working document for human editors and reviewers; it is not ready for public publication in its current form. Because the only inputs available at the time of drafting are the subject's name and broad cohort, this document deliberately refrains from asserting specific biographical facts, party affiliations, electoral histories, constituencies, offices held, family details, dates, or any quantitative claims. Editors are requested to treat every section below as a placeholder framework that must be verified, supplemented, or rewritten using reliable secondary sources before the article can be considered for publication. The aim of the present draft is to provide a structured starting body — including general context appropriate to Indian political biographies, an outline of customary sections, a verification checklist, and editorial cautions — so that subsequent editors can populate the article efficiently and responsibly. Where any specific assertion would normally appear, this draft instead notes that further sourcing is required, in line with IndiaWiki's neutrality, verifiability, and biographies-of-living-persons standards.
Indian political biographies typically situate the subject within a layered context that includes the level of government at which they have operated (panchayat, municipal, state legislature, or Parliament), the political party or parties with which they have been associated, and the broader regional or linguistic milieu in which their public life has unfolded. In the absence of confirmed details about Dinesh Shinde, editors should not assume any of these elements. The surname is found across several Indian states, and association with a particular state, party, or ideological tradition cannot be inferred from the name alone. Similarly, no assumption should be made about whether the subject is an elected representative, a party functionary, a former office-holder, an aspirant, or a public figure active in civic or grassroots politics. Editors preparing the final version should begin by establishing, through verifiable sources, the subject's principal political identity, the geography of their public activity, and the period during which they have been notable. Only after these foundational elements are confirmed should secondary details — such as portfolios, committee memberships, or organisational roles — be added, each accompanied by appropriate citations.
An article about a politician on IndiaWiki should clearly explain why the subject meets the threshold of encyclopaedic notability. For Indian political figures, notability typically rests on factors such as having held elected public office, having led a recognised political party or its significant unit, having played a documented role in a major policy initiative or movement, or having received sustained, independent coverage in reliable media. In the present draft, the significance of Dinesh Shinde cannot be articulated with confidence because no such confirmations are yet available. Editors should treat the establishment of notability as a precondition for proceeding with the article, rather than as a section that can be filled in retrospectively. If after diligent sourcing the subject is found not to meet IndiaWiki's notability criteria, the appropriate course of action may be to defer publication, merge the topic into a related article (for instance, on a party unit or constituency), or recommend deletion. Where notability is confirmed, this section in the final article should summarise it neutrally and concisely, without promotional language, and should reflect the weight given by independent sources.
The following checklist outlines areas that the final article will most likely need to address. Each item should be verified through at least one, and preferably multiple, reliable independent sources before being included. Editors should resist the temptation to fill these fields from social media profiles, party-issued biographies, or unverified aggregator websites.
For each verified item, editors should record the source inline so that subsequent reviewers can audit the claim. Items that cannot be reliably sourced should be left out rather than hedged with vague phrasing.
Once verification is complete, editors may consider organising the final article along the following lines, adapted to the actual material available:
Editors should keep the lead proportionate to the body and should avoid section headers for which there is no substantive sourced content. If a section would contain only a sentence or two, it is preferable to merge it into a broader section rather than create a near-empty heading.
This draft has been written in a deliberately cautious register because it is being produced from minimal inputs. Reviewers should be aware of the following points before further work is undertaken. First, the name Dinesh Shinde may correspond to more than one public figure; disambiguation should be performed at the outset, and if multiple notable individuals share the name, separate articles or a disambiguation page may be required. Second, no claims in this draft should be treated as facts about the subject; the document is a scaffold, not a source. Third, particular care must be taken with any potentially negative material, in line with IndiaWiki's policies on biographies of living persons, including the requirement of high-quality sourcing and a presumption in favour of privacy where notability is marginal. Fourth, promotional language, peacock terms, and unsourced superlatives must be removed during rewriting. Finally, if reliable sourcing cannot be established, editors should consider whether the article should proceed at all, rather than publishing a thin or speculative entry. A short, well-sourced article is preferable to a long, weakly sourced one.
No references have been cited in this draft because no specific factual claims about the subject have been made. Before publication, editors must add citations to reliable, independent, and where possible secondary sources, including reputable national and regional newspapers, established news agencies, official records of the Election Commission of India or the relevant legislative body, and scholarly works where available. Party websites and self-published materials may be used only for uncontroversial self-descriptive details and should not form the backbone of the article. Each substantive statement in the final version should be supported by at least one inline citation, and contested or sensitive statements by multiple independent sources.