Women consistently vote both in greater numbers and as a higher percentage of eligible voters than men, making them an attractive demographic for politicians. However, women more consistently support the Democratic Party than the Republican, for numerous reasons and with some notable exceptions
Women voted for the Democratic candidate more than men did in each US presidential election since 19...
The underrepresentation of women remains an issue worldwide. Scholars have argued that voters and pa...
Women hold political beliefs that differ systematically from those of men, a phenomenon scholars cal...
Since 1964, more women than men have voted for the Democratic presidential candidate. The purpose of...
Gender differences in vote choice, opinion, andparty identification have become a common featureof t...
While a significant amount of research seeks to explain the compara-tive number of women in national...
To explain women's underrepresentation in politics, supply-side factors receive much empirical suppo...
We argue that the modern American partisan gender gap—the tendency of men to identify more as Republ...
A partisan disparity in women representatives in the US House emerged in the 1980s and has continued...
e quantify the implications of voter bias and electoral competition for politicians’ gender composit...
There is substantial evidence that women tend to support different policies and political candidates...
This article compares the voting behavior of women and men in presidential elections since 1980. We ...
Women are greatly underrepresented in elected office. A large literature on the subject has consider...
Previous research shows that women are more likely to vote Democrat than men. Using the 2000 Middlet...
While the majority of women voted Democrat in the 2016 election, why did 53% of white women vote Rep...
Women voted for the Democratic candidate more than men did in each US presidential election since 19...
The underrepresentation of women remains an issue worldwide. Scholars have argued that voters and pa...
Women hold political beliefs that differ systematically from those of men, a phenomenon scholars cal...
Since 1964, more women than men have voted for the Democratic presidential candidate. The purpose of...
Gender differences in vote choice, opinion, andparty identification have become a common featureof t...
While a significant amount of research seeks to explain the compara-tive number of women in national...
To explain women's underrepresentation in politics, supply-side factors receive much empirical suppo...
We argue that the modern American partisan gender gap—the tendency of men to identify more as Republ...
A partisan disparity in women representatives in the US House emerged in the 1980s and has continued...
e quantify the implications of voter bias and electoral competition for politicians’ gender composit...
There is substantial evidence that women tend to support different policies and political candidates...
This article compares the voting behavior of women and men in presidential elections since 1980. We ...
Women are greatly underrepresented in elected office. A large literature on the subject has consider...
Previous research shows that women are more likely to vote Democrat than men. Using the 2000 Middlet...
While the majority of women voted Democrat in the 2016 election, why did 53% of white women vote Rep...
Women voted for the Democratic candidate more than men did in each US presidential election since 19...
The underrepresentation of women remains an issue worldwide. Scholars have argued that voters and pa...
Women hold political beliefs that differ systematically from those of men, a phenomenon scholars cal...