Based on the second wave of the Citizen Political Ambition Panel Study, we provide the first thorough analysis of how gender affects women and men\u27s efficacy to run for office. Our findings reveal that, despite comparable credentials, backgrounds, and experiences, accomplished women are substantially less likely than similarly situated men to perceive themselves as qualified to seek office. Importantly, women and men rely on the same factors when evaluating themselves as candidates, but women are less likely than men to believe they meet these criteria. Not only are women more likely than men to doubt that they have skills and traits necessary for electoral politics, but they are also more likely to doubt their abilities to engage in cam...
Of the 535 seats in the 114th U.S. Congress, women hold 104, or just over 19 percent. While this is ...
Current research suggests that gender prejudice no longer impedes women from winning top-level polit...
This thesis seeks to explore why so fewer women seek political candidacy in the United States. I beg...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...
A critical void in the research on women\u27s underrepresentation in elective office is an analysis ...
It has been established that in the realm of politics, gender stereotypes influence the perceptions ...
Despite an electoral system that appears to present excellent opportunities for women to win electiv...
Throughout human history, a disproportionate degree of political power around the world has been hel...
Previous research firmly establishes an array of factors that contribute to the success or failure o...
My thesis is interested in voter behavior and the role gender plays in their choice of candidates. S...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...
Based on survey responses from a national random sample of nearly 4,000 high school and college stud...
Despite decades of movement towards gender parity in other aspects of American society (e.g. educati...
Progress toward gender equality is thwarted by the underrepresentation of women in political leaders...
Whereas, most of the research in gender and politics looks at women in Congress, I examine the barri...
Of the 535 seats in the 114th U.S. Congress, women hold 104, or just over 19 percent. While this is ...
Current research suggests that gender prejudice no longer impedes women from winning top-level polit...
This thesis seeks to explore why so fewer women seek political candidacy in the United States. I beg...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...
A critical void in the research on women\u27s underrepresentation in elective office is an analysis ...
It has been established that in the realm of politics, gender stereotypes influence the perceptions ...
Despite an electoral system that appears to present excellent opportunities for women to win electiv...
Throughout human history, a disproportionate degree of political power around the world has been hel...
Previous research firmly establishes an array of factors that contribute to the success or failure o...
My thesis is interested in voter behavior and the role gender plays in their choice of candidates. S...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...
Based on survey responses from a national random sample of nearly 4,000 high school and college stud...
Despite decades of movement towards gender parity in other aspects of American society (e.g. educati...
Progress toward gender equality is thwarted by the underrepresentation of women in political leaders...
Whereas, most of the research in gender and politics looks at women in Congress, I examine the barri...
Of the 535 seats in the 114th U.S. Congress, women hold 104, or just over 19 percent. While this is ...
Current research suggests that gender prejudice no longer impedes women from winning top-level polit...
This thesis seeks to explore why so fewer women seek political candidacy in the United States. I beg...