Gender Stereotyping and the Electoral Success of Women Candidates: New Evidence from Local Elections in the United States

被引:39
作者
Anzia, Sarah F. [1 ]
Bernhard, Rachel [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[2] Univ Calif Davis, Davis, CA 95616 USA
关键词
gender stereotyping; women; local elections; election timing; REPUBLICAN WOMEN; INFORMATION; PARTY; CUES; SELECTION; SUPPORT; IMPACT; GAP; SEX;
D O I
10.1017/S0007123421000570
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Research shows that voters often use gender stereotypes to evaluate candidates, which should help women in some electoral contexts and hurt them in others. Yet, most research examines a single context at a time-usually US national elections, where partisanship is strong-and employs surveys and experiments, raising concerns that citizens' responses may not reflect how they actually vote. By analyzing returns from thousands of nonpartisan local elections, we test whether patterns of women's win rates relative to men's match expectations for how the electoral effects of gender stereotyping should vary by context. We find women have greater advantages over men in city council than mayoral races, still greater advantages in school board races, and decreasing advantages in more conservative constituencies. Thus, women fare better in stereotype-congruent contexts and worse in incongruent contexts. These effects are most pronounced during on-cycle elections, when voters tend to know less about local candidates.
引用
收藏
页码:1544 / 1563
页数:20
相关论文
共 37 条
  • [21] Do Local Party Chairs Think Women and Minority Candidates Can Win? Evidence from a Conjoint Experiment
    Doherty, David
    Dowling, Conor M.
    Miller, Michael G.
    JOURNAL OF POLITICS, 2019, 81 (04) : 1282 - 1297
  • [22] Minimum Wages and the Gender GAP in Pay: New Evidence from the United Kingdom and Ireland
    Bargain, Olivier
    Doorley, Karina
    Van Kerm, Philippe
    REVIEW OF INCOME AND WEALTH, 2019, 65 (03) : 514 - 539
  • [23] Do Investors Undervalue Female Directors Due to Gender Role Stereotypes? Evidence from the United States
    Ranjeeni, Kumari
    Naidu, Dharmendra
    ABACUS-A JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING FINANCE AND BUSINESS STUDIES, 2024, 60 (03): : 492 - 538
  • [24] Social Class, Gender, and Contemporary Parenting Standards in the United States: Evidence from a National Survey Experiment
    Ishizuka, Patrick
    SOCIAL FORCES, 2019, 98 (01) : 31 - 58
  • [25] Traces of Historical Redlining in the Contemporary United States: New Evidence from the Add Health Cohort
    Deangelis, Reed T.
    Frizzelle, Brian G.
    Hummer, Robert A.
    Harris, Kathleen Mullan
    POPULATION RESEARCH AND POLICY REVIEW, 2024, 43 (04)
  • [26] Oil price shocks and stock market returns: New evidence from the United States and China
    Broadstock, David C.
    Filis, George
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MARKETS INSTITUTIONS & MONEY, 2014, 33 : 417 - 433
  • [27] Climate policy uncertainty and regional innovation performance: New empirical evidence from the United States
    Farooq, Umar
    Shafiq, Muhammad Nouman
    Subhani, Bilal Haider
    Gillani, Seemab
    MANAGERIAL AND DECISION ECONOMICS, 2024, 45 (03) : 1497 - 1510
  • [28] Social externalities of women empowerment: Evidence from suffrage movements of late nineteenth and early twentieth century United States
    Noghanibehambari, Hamid
    Noghani, Farzaneh
    Tavassoli, Nahid
    SCOTTISH JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2023, 70 (03) : 268 - 284
  • [29] Women's Presence in Politics and Male Politicians Commitment to Gender Equality in Politics: Evidence from 290 Swedish Local Councils
    Kokkonen, Andrej
    Waengnerud, Lena
    JOURNAL OF WOMEN POLITICS & POLICY, 2017, 38 (02) : 199 - 220
  • [30] How Do Capital Ratios Affect Bank Risk-Taking: New Evidence From the United States
    Abbas, Faisal
    Masood, Omar
    Ali, Shoaib
    Rizwan, Sohail
    SAGE OPEN, 2021, 11 (01):