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Gender Gap in Political Representation and Recruitment

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Title: Gender Gap in Political Representation and Recruitment


1
Gender Gap in Political Representation and
Recruitment
  • Professor Bernadette C. Hayes

2
Lecture Outline
  • Introduction A definition of the gender gap
  • Mechanisms used to increase female political
    representation
  • Gender gap in political representation
  • Theoretical explanations for the
    under-representation of women
  • Gender gap in legislative recruitment
  • The process of legislative recruitment the
    British case
  • Conclusion

3
GENDER GAP
  • Difference in the proportion of women and men
    holding political office
  • ( women MPs - men MPs)
  • Difference in the proportion of women and men
    selected as political/parliamentary candidates
  • ( women candidates - men candidates)

4
Assumptions of Democratic Theory
  • Citizens will participate equally in political
    affairs
  • Their decisions will carry equal weight
  • How to achieve this ideal open to much dispute
  • particularly the case in relation to the
    political representation of women

5
Mechanisms Used to Increase the Political
Representation of Women
  • Quotas/all women short-lists
  • Twinning constituencies
  • Use of top-up seats

6
Quotas/All Women Short-Lists
  • Introduced by Labour in the run up to (1993) the
    1997 general election
  • In January 1996, was abandoned following a legal
    challenge by two aggrieved male applicants at an
    industrial tribunal as was believed to have
    contravened the sex discrimination act (1975)
  • Change of law in 2002 sex discrimination
    (election candidates) act (sdca)
  • Allows but does not require political parties to
    implement quotas of women/all women shortlists
    for a limited period of time
  • The act has a sunset clause in that provisions
    expire at the end of 2015, although can be
    extended by secondary legislation
  • In 2005, only Labour took advantage of its
    provisions by reintroducing all women shortlist
    (AWS) in its candidate selection in the majority
    of its retirement seats (labour mp standing down)
  • Also used by the Scottish Socialist Party (SSP)
    in 2003

7
Blaires babes The 101 Female MPs elected in
1997
8
Fiona Jones died January 8th 2007
  • Fellow MP, Jane Griffiths, who was deselected in
    2005 said The Party nationally and locally
    threw Fiona to the wolves, and if Tony cant
    sleep at night it should be about this.

9
Retired after one term
  • Tess Kingham Jenny Jones

10
Conservatives Rejects Quotas
  • A- List 100 Priority Candidates
  • Equal proportions of men and women
  • Local associations from 150 winnable seats
    required to choose from the list
  • Unpublished Louise Bagshawe (novelist) and Adam
    Rickitt (soap star)

11
Newsnight research
  • 52 privately educated
  • 46 women
  • 89 previous involved (worked with or stood for
    election) with Conservative party
  • 61 from South of England
  • 66 work in business/media/politics

12
Conservative MP Nadine Dorries
  • Changes have not gone far enough.
  • There is very little point in replacing a party
    which used to predominantly have MPs who were
    white, male barristers with 2.4 children and a
    Labrador from the south of England.. There is no
    point replacing them just simply with women who
    are of the same profile

13
Twinning Constituencies (Scotland and Wales)
  • Introduced by labour in first Scottish parliament
    and Welsh assembly elections in 1999
  • twin constituencies to allow both women and men
    to stand for election
  • the members of the two constituencies select
    candidates together
  • woman with the highest number of votes selected
    to stand for one constituency and the man with
    the highest number of votes selected for the other

14
Use of Top-Up Seats (Scotland and Wales)
  • Introduction of top-up or party lists where
  • alternate female and male candidates on party
    lists (zipping) Labour in Wales
  • Place women at the upper-end of party lists
    (Liberal Democrats in Scotland)

15
Under-Representation of Women in GB
  • Although over 51 of Population are
  • Significantly under-represented across
  • All decision-making bodies
  • Including the House of Commons

16
WOMEN MPS (WESTMINSTER)
Note There are 646 members of the House of
Commons Source Campbell and Lovenduski, 2005.
17
WOMEN MPs (WESTMINSTER)
18
WOMEN MPS (SCOTTISH PARLIAMENT N129)
19
WOMEN MPS (NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES)
Note There are 60 members of the Welsh Assembly.
20
WOMEN MPs (EQUIVALENTS) IN EUROPE
NOTE RANKED 14 AMONG THESE EUROPEAN NATIONS AND
51 OF 184 COUNTRIES LISTED BY THE
INTER-PARLIAMENTARY UNION
21
Explanatory models for the representational
weakness of women
  • Socialisation model
  • Situational factors
  • Voter stereotypes and discrimination
  • Process of legislative recruitment

22
Socialisation model
  • One of the first explanations proposed by
    political scientists
  • Rests on the assumption that during childhood men
    and women learn
  • different set of behavioural patterns and
    attitudes which are deemed appropriate for the
    sex/gender
  • girls learn traditional female values of
    nurturing and caring
  • boys learn to be competitive and aggressive
  • Key point girls and boys internalise these
    values and see them as natural and inevitable
  • so values that are considered appropriate for
    women are considered inappropriate for politics
  • Thus, both women and men consider women
    unsuitable for politics hence, politics is an
    exclusively male domain

23
More recent research questions these assumptions
  • 1. Decline in traditional sex-role attitudes and
    behaviour
  • appropriate models for male and female behaviour
    undergone dramatic change since the 1970s
  • women no longer expected to be passive and
    nurturing
  • traditional sex-role stereotyping also in decline
  • hence, many of the characteristics believed
    suitable for political life now found among women
  • 2. Research has found no difference between male
    and female children in relation to
  • - political interest and knowledge
  • - no evidence to support sex-role stereotyping
    among children
  • Thus socialisation theory not an adequate
    explanation

24
Situational factors
  • Argues that the lack of female political
    representation due to structural or situational
    factors
  • lesser educational achievement and occupational
    involvement
  • childcare responsibilities
  • Recent research refutes this
  • similar education levels among men and women
  • rapid growth in female employment
  • fastest growth in employment has been among
    married women with young children
  • Thus situational factors not an adequate
    explanation

25
Voter stereotypes and discrimination
  • Key explanation is that the electorate will not
    vote for women
  • reinvention of socialisation explanation under a
    different guise
  • Recent research disputes this assumption
  • women and men equally in favour of female
    representation
  • in many cases a female may be preferred
  • Recent research by EOC in Britain found
  • Turnout higher in constituencies where female
    candidate
  • both men and women more likely to support a
    female candidate
  • Hence, whatever the reasons for female lack of
    representation
  • voter bias is not one of them
  • Survey after survey in Britain show that not only
    does the electorate support the idea of more
    women
  • They should be encouraged to stand for parliament

26
Process of legislative recruitment
  • Current explanation for the under-representation
    of women
  • Basic assumption party selection committees both
    directly and indirectly discriminate against
    female candidate. How?
  • Not only fail to select female candidates but if
    do, are adopted for the most
  • problematic seats
  • Are not selected as incumbents or inheritors
  • but as challengers (fighting a seat held by
    another party)
  • Is this the case?
  • To answer this question need to investigate
    selection outcomes
  • as well as the process of selection
  • Much of the work in this area by Joni Lovenduski
    and Pippa Norris

27
WOMEN CANDIDATES (WESTMINSTER)
28
WOMEN CANDIDATES BY PARTY, 1992-2005
29
WOMEN CANDIDATES BY TYPE OF SEAT AND PARTY, 2005
Source Campbell and Lovenduski
30
WOMEN MPS ELECTED BY TYPE OF SEAT AND PARTY, 2005
Source Campbell and Lovenduski
31
The Selection Process
  • Two explanations for the lack of female
    representation in relation to the selection
    process
  • 1. Women are discriminated against by local
    selection committees
  • 2. lack of well-qualified women applicants
  • known as the demand (selectors discriminate)
    versus the supply (women not apply) explanation
  • Demand selectors choose candidates on the basis
    of stereotypes
  • favour well-educated, professional men in early
    middle-age
  • right sort of chap
  • Supply social bias in parliament simply reflects
    the pool of applicants
  • women absent
  • not because discriminated against but because do
    not apply
  • or might wish to apply but cannot do so because
    of resource limitations

32
Which Explanation Correct?
  • To assess these competing explanations need to
    compare the characteristics of
  • mps, candidates, applicants, party members and
    voters
  • MPs members of parliament
  • Candidates individuals who are selected to
    stand for parliament
  • Applicants on party lists individuals who put
    themselves forward for selection
  • Party members rank and file and those involved
    in the selection process
  • Voters general electorate
  • This is what Lovenduski and Norris did using data
    from the British candidate study of 1992

33
How assess the explanation?
  • If demand explanation correct (selectors
    discriminate) major difference in the
    characteristics of applicants versus candidates
  • If supply explanation correct (women not come
    forward) difference between the characteristics
    of party members versus applicants

34
Major Findings of the Study
  • MPs were not demographically representative of
    the British public in terms of the following
    race, education, class, age and gender
  • Parliament dominated by the professional
    chattering classes - well educated/high
    income/professional jobs
  • Argues this is not because of discrimination
    against applicants (demand) but due to the
    available pool of applicants (supply) willing to
    stand for parliament

35
Results
  • Found that within each party, the socio-economic
    status of mps, candidates and applicants were
    almost identical
  • Main difference was between these groups and
    party members
  • hence supports the supply-side explanation in
    that main difference is between applicants and
    members
  • not demand explanation as no difference between
    candidates and applicants

36
Gender results
  • Not as clear-cut
  • Supply more important for Conservatives
  • Demand Greater role for Labour

37
Gender Differences
Source Lovenduski and Norris (1995 117).
38
More recent research
  • Increasing importance of demand factors
  • Direct (gender-discriminatory questions asked)
    and indirect (ideas of what count as a good MP)
    discrimination in selection process
  • See Lovenduski (2005)
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