Simply counting the numbers of women present in politics is an inadequate basis for theorizing the difference they might make. Drawing on research on British MPs (interviews with Labour women MPs first elected in 1997, analysis of Labour MPs’ voting behaviour and signing of early day motions in the 1997 parliament, and MPs’ participation in parliamentary debates accompanying the Sex Discrimination (Election Candidates) Act), this article shows how insights gained from empirical research can inform and improve our theorizing. It suggests that the relationship between women’s descriptive and substantive representation is bet...
Women’s political participation and representation vary dramatically within and between countries. W...
What difference does gender make in the House of Commons? Do male and female MPs approach their role...
The 1997 British general election saw the return of 120 women Members of Parliament. The central que...
More and more countries implement quotas and install women’s policy agencies as an answer to the und...
This article addresses a foundational question of political representation: how representatives act ...
This article analyses the relationship between the representatives and the represented by comparing ...
More and more countries implement quotas and install women's policy agencies as an answer to the und...
A rather solid overall-conclusion in empirical research regarding the substantive representation is ...
The relationship between gender and politics has unfolded in the context of male domination. Questio...
The descriptive representation of women has increased greatly over the last decades. This thesis arg...
With the prospect of the first female President of the USA now fading from view, the question of wom...
The lack of consensus regarding what the substantive representation of women means involves far reac...
The present analysis heeds recent calls for a refocusing and reconceptualising of the substantive re...
In recent years, increasing women\u27s participation in electoral politics has become a priority for...
In 1919, Nancy Astor took her seat in the House of Commons as Britain’s first ever female MP. In the...
Women’s political participation and representation vary dramatically within and between countries. W...
What difference does gender make in the House of Commons? Do male and female MPs approach their role...
The 1997 British general election saw the return of 120 women Members of Parliament. The central que...
More and more countries implement quotas and install women’s policy agencies as an answer to the und...
This article addresses a foundational question of political representation: how representatives act ...
This article analyses the relationship between the representatives and the represented by comparing ...
More and more countries implement quotas and install women's policy agencies as an answer to the und...
A rather solid overall-conclusion in empirical research regarding the substantive representation is ...
The relationship between gender and politics has unfolded in the context of male domination. Questio...
The descriptive representation of women has increased greatly over the last decades. This thesis arg...
With the prospect of the first female President of the USA now fading from view, the question of wom...
The lack of consensus regarding what the substantive representation of women means involves far reac...
The present analysis heeds recent calls for a refocusing and reconceptualising of the substantive re...
In recent years, increasing women\u27s participation in electoral politics has become a priority for...
In 1919, Nancy Astor took her seat in the House of Commons as Britain’s first ever female MP. In the...
Women’s political participation and representation vary dramatically within and between countries. W...
What difference does gender make in the House of Commons? Do male and female MPs approach their role...
The 1997 British general election saw the return of 120 women Members of Parliament. The central que...