In the classic apportionment problem the goal is to decide how many seats of a parliament should be allocated to each party as a result of an election. The divisor methods provide a way of solving this problem by defining a notion of proportionality guided by some rounding rule. Motivated by recent challenges in the context of electoral apportionment, we consider the question of how to allocate the seats of a parliament under parity constraints between candidate types (e.g. equal number of men and women elected) while at the same time satisfying party proportionality. We consider two different approaches for this problem. The first mechanism, that follows a greedy approach, corresponds to a recent mechanism used in the Chilean Constitutiona...