Existing research about the effects of electoral systems on descriptive representation is mixed. In this paper, we test implications of theoretical arguments about the impact of electoral rules on voters’ propensity to vote for women candidates. We conducted a survey experiment during the 2017 provincial election in British Columbia, Canada, using actual candidates in both real and hypothetical electoral districts. We find that more permissive, or candidate-centered, forms of proportional representation do not improve descriptive representation of women; if anything, they diminish it. We interpret these results as being driven by the supply of candidates – voters tend to vote for incumbent, well-known candidates who happen to be predominant...
e quantify the implications of voter bias and electoral competition for politicians’ gender composit...
Replication dataset for: Do Electoral Rules Matter? Explaining National Differences in Women’s Repre...
To study the political mobilization of underrepresented groups, this article examines the effect of ...
Existing research about the effects of electoral systems on descriptive representation is mixed. In ...
International audienceIt is a well-established finding that proportional representation (PR) elector...
To explain the gender gap in legislatures, scholars have identified several socio-economic, politica...
Proportional electoral systems tend to be more beneficial for women’s descriptive representation tha...
We use multivariate analyses to test hypotheses concerning the elec-toral opportunity structure for ...
We know women are more likely to be elected under proportional representation, but it hasn’t been cl...
This article asks, What effect does the choice of a nations electoral system have on the gender comp...
We study how electoral systems affect the presence of women in politics in the context of Spanish mu...
The European Parliament (EP) has one of the highest proportions of women in its ranks, with over a t...
The matter of a gender gap in electoral participation is a fact in many parts of the world but has m...
e quantify the implications of voter bias and electoral competition for politicians’ gender composit...
Replication dataset for: Do Electoral Rules Matter? Explaining National Differences in Women’s Repre...
To study the political mobilization of underrepresented groups, this article examines the effect of ...
Existing research about the effects of electoral systems on descriptive representation is mixed. In ...
International audienceIt is a well-established finding that proportional representation (PR) elector...
To explain the gender gap in legislatures, scholars have identified several socio-economic, politica...
Proportional electoral systems tend to be more beneficial for women’s descriptive representation tha...
We use multivariate analyses to test hypotheses concerning the elec-toral opportunity structure for ...
We know women are more likely to be elected under proportional representation, but it hasn’t been cl...
This article asks, What effect does the choice of a nations electoral system have on the gender comp...
We study how electoral systems affect the presence of women in politics in the context of Spanish mu...
The European Parliament (EP) has one of the highest proportions of women in its ranks, with over a t...
The matter of a gender gap in electoral participation is a fact in many parts of the world but has m...
e quantify the implications of voter bias and electoral competition for politicians’ gender composit...
Replication dataset for: Do Electoral Rules Matter? Explaining National Differences in Women’s Repre...
To study the political mobilization of underrepresented groups, this article examines the effect of ...