The 1997 British general election saw the return of 120 women Members of Parliament. The central question of this thesis is whether this unprecedented number of women MPs makes a difference to the political representation of women. The research is applied political theory, in which conceptual analysis is informed by and informs the empirical research. Pitkin's seminal contribution The Concept of Representation and Phillips' The Politics of Presence are both considered. In particular, Phillips' 'shot in the dark thesis', which makes a link between women's numerical representation and the substantive representation of women by women representatives, is subjected to empirical analysis. The data are drawn from interviews with half of the Labour...
What difference does gender make in the House of Commons? Do male and female MPs approach their role...
Parties vary substantially in the proportion of women they send to parliament. I examine how party c...
This article addresses a foundational question of political representation: how representatives act ...
The thesis explores the impact of women MPs from 1987-98. It considers whether women MPs make a subs...
The entry of the 1997 cohort of Labour women into public life offers a test case of whether, and und...
This article analyses the relationship between the representatives and the represented by comparing ...
In 1919, Nancy Astor took her seat in the House of Commons as Britain’s first ever female MP. In the...
Women and the Liberal Democrats is a timely and original exploration of women's representation and t...
The descriptive representation of women has increased greatly over the last decades. This thesis arg...
The focus on female MPs and leftist and feminist issues in traditional studies of women's substantiv...
This article provides empirical evidence to support recent assertions that the substantive represent...
The following discussion responds to recent calls for a more holistic approach to studying the subst...
Defence date: 13 December 2011Examining Board: Professor Mark Franklin (EUI, Supervisor) Professor...
Parties vary substantially in the proportion of women they send to Parliament. We examine how party ...
This thesis focuses on the political representation of women. It is concerned with the extent to whi...
What difference does gender make in the House of Commons? Do male and female MPs approach their role...
Parties vary substantially in the proportion of women they send to parliament. I examine how party c...
This article addresses a foundational question of political representation: how representatives act ...
The thesis explores the impact of women MPs from 1987-98. It considers whether women MPs make a subs...
The entry of the 1997 cohort of Labour women into public life offers a test case of whether, and und...
This article analyses the relationship between the representatives and the represented by comparing ...
In 1919, Nancy Astor took her seat in the House of Commons as Britain’s first ever female MP. In the...
Women and the Liberal Democrats is a timely and original exploration of women's representation and t...
The descriptive representation of women has increased greatly over the last decades. This thesis arg...
The focus on female MPs and leftist and feminist issues in traditional studies of women's substantiv...
This article provides empirical evidence to support recent assertions that the substantive represent...
The following discussion responds to recent calls for a more holistic approach to studying the subst...
Defence date: 13 December 2011Examining Board: Professor Mark Franklin (EUI, Supervisor) Professor...
Parties vary substantially in the proportion of women they send to Parliament. We examine how party ...
This thesis focuses on the political representation of women. It is concerned with the extent to whi...
What difference does gender make in the House of Commons? Do male and female MPs approach their role...
Parties vary substantially in the proportion of women they send to parliament. I examine how party c...
This article addresses a foundational question of political representation: how representatives act ...