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E-grāmata: Image of Gender and Political Leadership: A Multinational View of Women and Leadership

Edited by (Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University), Edited by (Associate Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Apr-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197642757
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Apr-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197642757

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"This is the first multi-country, factorial experiment on candidate gender designed to avoid social desirability bias and provide a real-world measure of the importance of gender via direct quantitative contrasts with party effect size (the experimental control, which was statistically significant in all cases). The 8 countries: Canada in Alberta and Quebec, Chile, Costa Rica, England, Israel, Sweden, Uruguay, and the U.S. in California and Texas, are established presidential and parliamentary democracies that jointly offer variance on incorporation of women in government, policy agenda, electoral rules, and party system. Young adult participants come from highly diverse socioeconomic backgrounds in all cases. Political science and psychology literaturesare the basis of a multi-dimensional framework about how context molds mental templates of leadership, yielding 11 hypotheses. The 2x2x2 experimental factors, treatments (a lengthy candidate speech with partisan jargon and buzz words), field implementation, and ANOVA techniques used for analysis are outlined in detail. Resident in-country experts who implemented the experiment interpret findings against key country-specific historic and current events in separate country chapters, followed by a chapter providing a meta-analysis of all hypotheses across cases. Though many broad and case specific conclusions can be drawn, the main finding is that traditional leadership images (leaders are men) appear only where defense dominates the political agenda. Otherwise, in diverse contexts, women candidates are accepted as leaders by the participants, indicating young adults' approval of women's ability to hold diverse posts, win votes, and manage stereotypically masculine policy areas"--

There are many theories as to why women remain severely underrepresented in democratic governments. Perhaps voters do not consider women to be capable leaders, or maybe party elites obstruct women's paths to office because they don't believe that they are electable. But if these attitudes are hurdles standing in the way of women being elected to office, where did they develop?

In The Image of Gender and Political Leadership, Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson and Nehemia Geva bring together parallel experiments conducted in countries around the world to compare the ways in which young adults view gender and leadership. Together, the chapters in this book present findings from on-site experiments conducted with over 6,000 young adult students of highly diverse socio-economic backgrounds in eight countries that have varying levels of experience with women in government: Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, England, Israel, Sweden, the United States, and Uruguay. Overall, the book finds little evidence of traditional gender stereotypes that would limit young people's support for women as political leaders. Women candidates are accepted as leaders by the participants, indicating young adults' approval of women's ability to hold diverse posts, win votes, and manage stereotypically masculine policy areas. The book also finds that young adults are very responsive to political
party--regardless of gender, they tend to favor candidates from their preferred parties. With an in-depth, cross-national perspective, Taylor-Robinson and Geva provide empirical evidence to dispel myths about what contributes to the low election rates of women, and importantly, investigate logical steps to achieve gender parity.

Recenzijas

In their innovative study, Taylor-Robinson and Geva leverage survey experiments with young adults from eight democracies across the globe to demonstrate how mental templates of leadership have transformed to be more inclusive of women candidates. This novel research challenges conventional wisdom about preferences for male candidates, showing that women fit the leadership image held by most young adults. * Tiffany D. Barnes, Professor of Political Science, University of Kentucky * Taylor-Robinson and Geva's ambitious, collaborative research suggests that young people largely view women as leadersacross posts and in stereotypically masculine and feminine policy areas. Their edited volume questions conventional wisdom about the role gender stereotypes now play in politics and sets the stage for future research on this important topic. * Diana O'Brien, Professor of Political Science, Washington University in Saint Louis * How much do young adults use gender stereotypes in evaluating political candidates? Taylor-Robinson and Geva's study shows that across culturally diverse democracies, candidates' sex, compared to information about candidates' parties, tends to have little impact on assessments of those running for office. However, notable exceptions remain. Anyone curious about voter decision-making and the psychology of gender should read this ambitious, beautifully cohesive volume. * Catherine Reyes-Housholder, Assistant Professor, Instituto de Ciencia Polķtica, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile * This outstanding collection provides important, cross-national insight into how young people assess women's ability to govern. Through parallel experiments in eight countries, Taylor-Robinson and Geva offer new wisdom into how the presence of women in government is changing who young people view as fit to lead; this is an invaluable text for growing our understanding of modern responses to women in power. * Melody Valdini, Associate Professor of Political Science, Portland State University *

Acknowledgments ix
Contributors xi
PART I MENTAL TEMPLATES OF LEADERS AND DESIGNING AN EXPERIMENT TO STUDY TEMPLATES
1 Mental Templates of Leaders
3(19)
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson
Nehemia Geva
2 Research Protocol
22(35)
Nehemia Geva
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson
PART II FINDINGS IN INDIVIDUAL CASES
3 Costa Rica---Where Urban Young People View Women as Leaders
57(20)
Gerardo Hernandez Naranjo
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson
4 The Masculine Template in Perceived Competence of Women in Israeli Politics
77(21)
Ayala Yarkoney-Sorek
Nehemia Geva
5 Attitudes Toward Women in Government: Evidence from an Experiment in Canada's Alberta and Quebec Provinces
98(23)
Melanee Thomas
Valerie-Anne Maheo
Guillaume Bogiaris
6 Young Adults' Attitudes to Women Candidates in Uruguay: No Obstacle to Change
121(20)
Niki Johnson
7 England: Young People View Women as Leaders
141(21)
Claire Annesley
Beatriz Lacerda Ration
Jake Watts
8 Party over Gender: Young Adults' Evaluations of Political Leaders in California and Texas
162(23)
Kostanca Dhima
Jennifer M. Piscopo
9 A Generation Without Political Gender Biases?: The Case of Sweden
185(20)
Elin Bjarnegard
Josefina Erikson
Par Zetterberg
10 Chiles Shift to the Left and the Rise of Women
205(24)
Alejandro Ramm
Jose Manuel Gaete
Milena Morales Bonich
PART III CROSS-NATIONAL FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
11 Meta-Analysis Assessment of Candidate Gender as an Attribute of Young Adult Leadership Templates
229(23)
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson
Nehemia Geva
12 Do Women Fit the Leadership Image? Yes!
252(9)
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson
Nehemia Geva
References 261(20)
Index 281
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson is Professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University. Her research focuses on how the design of democratic institutions affects representation and the consequences for consolidating democracy.

Nehemia Geva is Associate Professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University. His research highlights experimental methodology in the assessment of the public's preferences and choices of political policies and actions.