Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25595/3609
Author(s)
Davidson-Schmich, Louise K.
Journal Title
Femina politica : Zeitschrift für feministische Politik-Wissenschaft
Year of publication
2018
Volume
27
Issue number
2
Page reference
53–70
Language
englisch
Abstract
One hundred years after being granted the right to active suffrage, German women remain underrepresented in elective office. Quotas have partially addressed demand-side barriers to gender parity in descriptive representation, but significant supply-side gaps remain. Men comprise over 70% of political party members in the Federal Republic, dominating the bodies that provide candidates for elective office. Solutions to this supply-side problem have often focused on “fixing” women to fit into gendered party institutions, rather than altering these structures to be more welcoming to women. In contrast, drawing on interviews with (potential) party members in Germany, this article identifies informal institutions that deter gender-balanced involvement in political parties and suggests ways in which these norms might be changed.
Subject
Partizipation
political parties
Politik
Repräsentation
underrepresentation
ddc:300
political parties
Politik
Repräsentation
underrepresentation
ddc:300
Publication type
Zeitschriftenartikel
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