Despite being a democratic and economically successful country, women in Japanese politics are extremely underrepresented. Since institutional factors do not explicitly prohibit women from holding office, this project turns to cultural factors to analyze this problem. Issues such as strict gender roles, sexual harassment, and rhetoric surrounding women politicians are some factors contextualizing the lives of Japanese women. In order to better understand these cultural barriers, this project turns to content analysis of news media in Japan to consider the ways in which women politicians are framed to the electorate, which may thus explain the low rates of elected women
ONO Yoshikuni - Gender Stereotypes and Candidate Evaluation: Why are Japanese Women Underrepresented...
This paper aimed to identify the contributions of Japanese women politicians in postwar Japan. The r...
ABSTRACT Japan is often judged as a unique country which on one part has managed to implement the de...
Despite being a democratic and economically successful country, women in Japanese politics are extre...
Notwithstanding the country’s socio-economic advancement, Japanese women’s presence in politics lags...
Why is it that a country advanced in technology, human rights, and many other developmental indices ...
Women are politically underrepresented. This is true in Japan regardless of its political and ...
In 1985 a director general of the cultural affairs bureau of the Ministry of Education (in Japan), M...
The 1979 UN Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women highlights th...
This paper focuses on Japan, a socioeconomically advanced, developed democracy which has relatively ...
Political alienation, characterized as a lack of faith in government and of a sense of power to infl...
Although women have consistently outvoted men in elections in Japan since the 1970s, the country has...
This book looks at the gendering of the political system in Japan and the effects of that system on ...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
The study of women and politics in Japan provided many insights into women\u27s activism as well as ...
ONO Yoshikuni - Gender Stereotypes and Candidate Evaluation: Why are Japanese Women Underrepresented...
This paper aimed to identify the contributions of Japanese women politicians in postwar Japan. The r...
ABSTRACT Japan is often judged as a unique country which on one part has managed to implement the de...
Despite being a democratic and economically successful country, women in Japanese politics are extre...
Notwithstanding the country’s socio-economic advancement, Japanese women’s presence in politics lags...
Why is it that a country advanced in technology, human rights, and many other developmental indices ...
Women are politically underrepresented. This is true in Japan regardless of its political and ...
In 1985 a director general of the cultural affairs bureau of the Ministry of Education (in Japan), M...
The 1979 UN Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women highlights th...
This paper focuses on Japan, a socioeconomically advanced, developed democracy which has relatively ...
Political alienation, characterized as a lack of faith in government and of a sense of power to infl...
Although women have consistently outvoted men in elections in Japan since the 1970s, the country has...
This book looks at the gendering of the political system in Japan and the effects of that system on ...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
The study of women and politics in Japan provided many insights into women\u27s activism as well as ...
ONO Yoshikuni - Gender Stereotypes and Candidate Evaluation: Why are Japanese Women Underrepresented...
This paper aimed to identify the contributions of Japanese women politicians in postwar Japan. The r...
ABSTRACT Japan is often judged as a unique country which on one part has managed to implement the de...