Attitudes about women's expertise can play a role in limiting their access to influential public spaces, including elected government positions. In the Arab Gulf, women remain underrepresented in electoral politics. This research seeks to answer two important questions. Does this underrepresentation stem from the belief that women will govern incompetently? Or are they viewed as less electable? A field experiment is used to investigate the attitudes of young adults in Qatar. It finds bias against the women candidate exists for both competence and electability among some subsamples of students, including female, liberal, and advanced students
The dearth of women leaders in fields such as politics, education, business, et al., has been a topi...
Women have yet to enter to Bahrain’s parliament despite being permitted to run for some years. With ...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...
Many studies of women\u27s electability in the developing world focus on single traits such as gende...
Purpose: In patriarchal settings, cultural barriers continue to influence women’s participation in p...
Interest in politics is an important ingredient in the formation of civil society, which in turn pr...
Despite commitments by the Arabian Gulf countries to promote gender equality and policies of nondisc...
Since the introduction of women’s suffrage in 2005, the number of women elected to parliament in Kuw...
It has been established that in the realm of politics, gender stereotypes influence the perceptions ...
In this twenty-first century, it is crystal clear that education is the most powerful instrument for...
Recent archival and experimental research has revealed that women are more likely than men to be app...
Based on the second wave of the Citizen Political Ambition Panel Study, we provide the first thoroug...
In this twenty-first century, it is crystal clear that education is the most powerful instrument for...
Despite extensive research into women's leadership representation and roles, little is known about t...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...
The dearth of women leaders in fields such as politics, education, business, et al., has been a topi...
Women have yet to enter to Bahrain’s parliament despite being permitted to run for some years. With ...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...
Many studies of women\u27s electability in the developing world focus on single traits such as gende...
Purpose: In patriarchal settings, cultural barriers continue to influence women’s participation in p...
Interest in politics is an important ingredient in the formation of civil society, which in turn pr...
Despite commitments by the Arabian Gulf countries to promote gender equality and policies of nondisc...
Since the introduction of women’s suffrage in 2005, the number of women elected to parliament in Kuw...
It has been established that in the realm of politics, gender stereotypes influence the perceptions ...
In this twenty-first century, it is crystal clear that education is the most powerful instrument for...
Recent archival and experimental research has revealed that women are more likely than men to be app...
Based on the second wave of the Citizen Political Ambition Panel Study, we provide the first thoroug...
In this twenty-first century, it is crystal clear that education is the most powerful instrument for...
Despite extensive research into women's leadership representation and roles, little is known about t...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...
The dearth of women leaders in fields such as politics, education, business, et al., has been a topi...
Women have yet to enter to Bahrain’s parliament despite being permitted to run for some years. With ...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...