2014
DOI: 10.1017/s0003055414000239
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Quotas for Men: Reframing Gender Quotas as a Means of Improving Representation for All

Abstract: Gender quotas traditionally focus on the underrepresentation of women. Conceiving of quotas in this way perpetuates the status of men as the norm and women as the "other." Women are subject to heavy scrutiny of their qualifications and competence, whereas men's credentials go unchallenged. This paper calls for a normative shift towards the problem of overrepresentation, arguing that the quality of representation is negatively affected by having too large a group drawn from too narrow a talent pool. Curbing ove… Show more

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Cited by 129 publications
(114 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, as argued by Murray (2014), a quota reduces the number of elected seats available for men. With fewer seats to distribute, the quota may have limited the ability of mediocre leaders to nominate mediocre followers to sustain their continued leadership.…”
Section: B the Impact Of The Quotamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, as argued by Murray (2014), a quota reduces the number of elected seats available for men. With fewer seats to distribute, the quota may have limited the ability of mediocre leaders to nominate mediocre followers to sustain their continued leadership.…”
Section: B the Impact Of The Quotamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, political traditionalists claim that the "best" candidate should be selected even if this leads to significant gender imbalance in parliaments. Yet, if political recruitment is biased in favor of social elites, the overrecruitment of men may not derive solely from merit (Murray 2014). Without definitive criteria for evaluating prospective candidates and judging those already elected, we cannot determine whether political recruitment is meritocratic.…”
Section: What Makes a Good Politician? Reassessing The Criteria Used mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Awad () demonstrates that the same policy can lead to quite different reactions based on whether it is labelled as “affirmative action” or as “promoting diversity.” When the latter was the case, African Americans were stigmatised less by others, particularly by White men and conservative participants—whose support may be hardest to gain in the first place. Similarly, Murray () argues it might be beneficial to frame quota‐like policies as focussing on men's over‐representation and the consequence of relying on a talent pool that is too narrow.…”
Section: Practical Implications and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%