2016
DOI: 10.1017/gov.2016.4
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Comparing Candidate Selection: A Feminist Institutionalist Approach

Abstract: This contribution evaluates the theoretical and methodological challenges of researching the gendered dynamics of candidate selection in comparative perspective. It argues that comparative studies should take into account not only the gendered nature of political parties and their wider institutional context, but must also investigate the informal aspects of the selection process and their gendered consequences. The article explores these dynamics by revisiting original in-depth research on the candidate selec… Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
(54 reference statements)
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“…As posited by Duerst-Lahti (1997: 12), 'understanding the implications of gender is essential for understanding executive power' . The relational character of gender entails that women's chances of being (s)elected are not independent from men's chances of being (s)elected (Bjarnegård & Kenny 2016). Attention must be then paid to the extent to which access to opportunities and the definition of the qualities more valued to take advantage of those opportunities are patterned through gender (Kenney 1996: 456).…”
Section: Theorising Gendered Pathways To Top Leadership Positionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As posited by Duerst-Lahti (1997: 12), 'understanding the implications of gender is essential for understanding executive power' . The relational character of gender entails that women's chances of being (s)elected are not independent from men's chances of being (s)elected (Bjarnegård & Kenny 2016). Attention must be then paid to the extent to which access to opportunities and the definition of the qualities more valued to take advantage of those opportunities are patterned through gender (Kenney 1996: 456).…”
Section: Theorising Gendered Pathways To Top Leadership Positionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since women and other candidates from out‐groups tend to lack such contacts, the existence of close‐knit networks often benefits candidates that are within the dominant group (Bjarnegård, , p. 37). For example, close relationships between two men are seen as stabilizing, whereas close relationships between a man and a woman are seen as endangering the predictability and stability of these ties (Bjarnegård & Kenny, ). Arriola and Johnson () advance a similar argument about clientelism in the African context.…”
Section: Theory: Corruption Homosocial Network and Gendered Recruimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite this, the attempt of every political party to comply with the policy deserves appreciation. Their compliance to the policy is indicated in the increase of women representatives, that it is against the findings by Bjarnegard, stating that the regulation is incapable of increasing the elected women representatives (Bjarnegard & Kenny, 2016). But who made the decision, whose determine someone to be a candidate is hard to know because it is in a secret garden (Bjarnegard & Kenny, 2015).…”
Section: Post-implementation Policy Verificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That the societal culture is hard to change, Paxton in his study mentions one possible thing to be done, which is to make the policy more effective through changes in the norms that rule the women participation in politics (Paxton, 2015). This statement, however, has been argued by Bjarnegard by stating that activating regulations would only make the political parties better at implementing the letter of the law, and they do not get more women elected (Bjarnegard, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%