21 research outputs found
Swedenâs Feminist Initiative are on the rise, but what does the history of womenâs parties tell us about their prospects?
With the success of Soraya Post and Feminist Initiative in Sweden this year, Claire McGing looks at womenâs political parties, how they emerge, what influences they can have, and the challenges they face. While the influence of womenâs parties has historically frequently been transitory, they nonetheless have a âcontagionâ effect on mainstream parties, who seek to protect their status by feminising their organisations
Analysis of the women selected and elected by quota in Ireland dispel the myth that they were under-qualified
The introduction of legal gender quotas for the 2016 general election in Ireland resulted in a marked improvement in the number of women candidates selected and TDs (parliamentarian) elected. However, questions of merit and qualifications were continually raised about women candidates throughout the campaign. In this blog Fiona Buckley and Claire McGing assess the political experience of women candidates and dispel the myth that women candidates were unqualified or unmerited candidates
Is local office a springboard for women to DĂĄil Ăireann?
Previous research has found the single transferable vote electoral system is relatively friendly to women candidates. Despite this, female representation in the Irish Parliament remains substantially lower than in most other democracies. Drawing on pipeline theory and localism, we assess the impact of local office-holding on the success of male and female major party candidates in the 2007 and 2011 Irish general elections. We find previous experience in local office is a key springboard to higher office for men and women, and when women serve in local government the likelihood of election increases significantly
Gender and Electoral Representation in Ireland
This article reviews the historic and contemporary challenges to womenâs electoral representation in Ireland. After summarizing the cultural and institutional obstacles to greater female representation, this article analyzes candidate selection, especially in relation to the 2011 Irish General Election, a process that appears to be the significant hurdle preventing more women from attaining elected office. It also discusses the proposed legislation that uses quotas to ensure the major political parties in Ireland nominate initially at least 30 per cent of their candidates to be women. It is hoped that this measure will redress the historic and chronic underrepresentation of women in Irish electoral politics.Dans cet article, les auteurs reconsidĂšrent les dĂ©fis auxquels les femmes candidates Ă la reprĂ©sentation Ă©lectorale ont fait et font encore face en Irlande. AprĂšs avoir rĂ©sumĂ© les obstacles culturels et institutionnels qui sâopposent Ă une plus grande reprĂ©sentation des femmes, cet article analyse le processus de sĂ©lection des candidats notamment lors des Ă©lections lĂ©gislatives irlandaises de 2011. Ce processus semble ĂȘtre un obstacle visiblement considĂ©rable Ă lâĂ©lection de davantage de femmes. Cet article sâinterroge aussi sur la lĂ©gislation qui propose dâimposer des quotas afin de garantir la nomination d'au moins 30 % de femmes au sein des partis politiques principaux d'Irlande. Cette mesure devrait parvenir Ă rĂ©soudre le problĂšme de la sous-reprĂ©sentation des femmes dans les Ă©lections irlandaises
The impact of online misogyny on womenâs participation: democracy experts respond
Many women, including a number of high-profile British politicians, have been the targets of misogynistic abuse via social media. Democratic Audit recently featured an article by Laura Bates, arguing that this trend has negative effect on rates of female participation in public life. In this post we ask leading democracy and gender experts to respond, sharing their experiences and views on how misogyny undermines democracy
'Women of character': Women's Political Representation in DĂĄil Ăireann in Revolutionary and Post-Revolutionary Ireland
This chapter outlines and assesses womenâs political representation in DĂĄil Ăireann, the lower
house of the Irish Parliament, in both revolutionary and post-revolutionary Ireland. It argues
that the establishment of the Irish Free State and the onset of Civil War in 1922 represent a
shift in the opportunities available for women to enter parliamentary politics. Although the
first woman MP ever elected was from Ireland and six women TDs1 were returned in the
1921 general election, DĂĄil Ăireann following independence was a âcolder houseâ for
womenâs representation. The outright opposition of women TDs (and Republican women
more generally) to the terms of the Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1922 was a crucial factor in the
decline of womenâs representation, as was the influence of various political, legislative and
socio-cultural changes in the Irish Free State. Drawing on the parliamentary record and
secondary sources, this chapter aims to reveal political womenâs agency as activists and
politicians in the decades that followed the establishment of the Irish Free State and considers
the gendered obstacles the first women TDs faced in their roles. In doing so, the chapter
assists with an important reappraisal of women in politics over this period
Electoral quotas and womenâs rights
Electoral gender quotas, which aim to increase either the proportion of women candidates or political representatives, are currently used in over a hundred countries around the world. In most cases quota measures have been adopted over the past two decades. This chapter shows that the 1995 Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action fundamentally changed the international discourse on the diagnosis of womenâs underrepresentation in politics and thus the solutions to it. As opposed to waiting for women to incrementally âcatch upâ with men, quotas represent a fast-track approach to increasing womenâs representation in politics. Significantly, the use of electoral gender quotas means that the Global South has now overtaken the Global North as world leaders in womenâs parliamentary representation. This is a rapid turnaround on the situation just 20 years ago where the Scandinavian countries and the Netherlands were at the top of the world rankings for womenâs representation.Despite there being resistance to their adoption and full implementation in most contexts, this chapter argues that electoral gender quotas have significantly advanced womenâs access to parliamentary politics at a global level. The use of proportional representation (PR) continues to progress womenâs representation to a much greater extent than plurality/majoritarian systems, and PR systems are generally more facilitating of quota implementation. Voluntary party quotas can be as effective as legal quotas if the right institutional and ideological factors are present. When properly implemented, quotas obstruct highly male-dominated recruitment patterns by encouraging or requiring parties to select increased numbers of women candidates or representatives. </p
Feminist and gender geographies in Ireland
This report discusses feminist and gender geographies in
Ireland. We first focus on the ways in which gender constructs Irish geographies, updating numbers of women in
academic positions across Ireland. This shows that women
are increasingly in secure positions, but remain under-represented in more senior positions. We then turn to
research. We discuss how femininities and women, and
masculinities and men, have been addressed in Irish geographies. The focus on femininities and women is crucial
given recent strides towards gender and reproductive justice. We then briefly summarise sexualities work. The report
concludes by arguing that Ireland not only has vibrant gender/feminist geographical scholarship, it also has significant
potential for emerging research and developing new theorisations and research agendas