Recent evidence suggests that women overcome the potential negative impact of gender stereotypes by emerging when they are stronger candidates than men. I leverage an original survey of state legislative candidates to determine whether women devote more time to their campaigns. I find that women on the whole, and those who had previously been elected to a political office in particular, invested more of their personal time into the campaign than men. This difference is driven by the fact that women are more likely to forgo employment during the election. These findings suggest that women are more likely than men to arrange their personal obligations in such a fashion that they can run stronger campaigns
It is a matter of conventional wisdom that women candidates have more trouble than their male counte...
Women have made significant strides in politics, but differences persist in how female and male cand...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...
Whereas, most of the research in gender and politics looks at women in Congress, I examine the barri...
Record numbers of women were elected into office in the US in recent years, and campaign financing m...
This thesis looks at strategic campaign strategies for female-candidates running for elective office...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...
© 2019 University of Utah. Do women candidates in the United States more openly provide the specific...
Based on the second wave of the Citizen Political Ambition Panel Study, we provide the first thoroug...
The surge in women running for office has brought renewed attention to female candidates and their ...
Despite an electoral system that appears to present excellent opportunities for women to win electiv...
This study examines the possibility that the mass media, by covering male and female candidates diff...
To study gender differences in candidate emergence, we conduct a laboratory experiment in which we c...
All-women races are steadily growing in politics as more women run with every election. While resear...
A critical void in the research on women\u27s underrepresentation in elective office is an analysis ...
It is a matter of conventional wisdom that women candidates have more trouble than their male counte...
Women have made significant strides in politics, but differences persist in how female and male cand...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...
Whereas, most of the research in gender and politics looks at women in Congress, I examine the barri...
Record numbers of women were elected into office in the US in recent years, and campaign financing m...
This thesis looks at strategic campaign strategies for female-candidates running for elective office...
Women\u27s under-representation in politics is an empirical fact. The U.S. ranks 102nd in the world ...
© 2019 University of Utah. Do women candidates in the United States more openly provide the specific...
Based on the second wave of the Citizen Political Ambition Panel Study, we provide the first thoroug...
The surge in women running for office has brought renewed attention to female candidates and their ...
Despite an electoral system that appears to present excellent opportunities for women to win electiv...
This study examines the possibility that the mass media, by covering male and female candidates diff...
To study gender differences in candidate emergence, we conduct a laboratory experiment in which we c...
All-women races are steadily growing in politics as more women run with every election. While resear...
A critical void in the research on women\u27s underrepresentation in elective office is an analysis ...
It is a matter of conventional wisdom that women candidates have more trouble than their male counte...
Women have made significant strides in politics, but differences persist in how female and male cand...
“Electability” has been of great interest in media coverage and popular conceptions of recent electi...