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pro vyhledávání: '"M Piscopo"'
Autor:
Mezey, Susan Gluck
Publikováno v:
Perspectives on Politics, 2014 Dec 01. 12(4), 943-945.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43280092
Publikováno v:
Journal of Politics in Latin America, Vol 16 (2024)
Many Latin American and other Global South countries adopted gender quotas during democratic transitions. What explains late-adopting cases like Chile? We analyze two instances: the 2015–2016 electoral reforms, which finally introduced a 40-percent
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/16fd07e51e3c4378bd4cc3098c772c7b
Autor:
YOON, Jiso
Publikováno v:
ジェンダー研究 : お茶の水女子大学ジェンダー研究センター年報. 17:155-158
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紀要論文
紀要論文
Autor:
Susan Gluck Mezey
Publikováno v:
Perspectives on Politics. 12:943-945
Autor:
Silvia Lange
Publikováno v:
Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft.
Publikováno v:
Politics & Gender. :1-5
A much-circulated image during the Donald Trump administration showed Vice President Mike Pence and members of the Republican House Freedom Caucus discussing the removal of maternity coverage from the Affordable Care Act—with not a single woman or
Publikováno v:
American Political Science Review. :1-21
Previous work suggests that observing women officeholders increases women’s political ambition. Yet, jumps in women’s representation in the United States’ “Years of the Woman”—following the Anita Hill testimonies and the election of Donal
Autor:
Lange, Silvia
Publikováno v:
Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft; December 2014, Vol. 8 Issue: 3-4 p389-391, 3p
Autor:
Diana Z. O’Brien, Jennifer M. Piscopo
Publikováno v:
Politics & Gender. :1-9
Politics is increasingly dominated by crises, from pandemics to extreme weather events. These Critical Perspectives essays analyze crises’ gendered implications by focusing on their consequences for women’s descriptive and substantive representat
Publikováno v:
PS: Political Science & Politics. 56:61-68
Research on the political science profession has shown that homophilous research networks—that is, those organized along the lines of gender and race/ethnicity—reproduce hierarchies. Research networks composed of white men experience the most pre