Gender, Ethnicity, and Intersectionality in Cabinets by Amy H. Liu, Hardcover, 9781009570473 | Buy online at The Nile
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Gender, Ethnicity, and Intersectionality in Cabinets

Asia and Europe in Comparative Perspective

Author: Amy H. Liu, Roman Hlatky, Keith Padraic Chew, Eoin L. Power, Sam Selsky, Betty Compton and Meiying Xu   Series: Elements in Gender and Politics

Hardcover

Examines the representation of women and ethnic minorities in government cabinets, using original data spanning Asia and Europe (1960-2015).

What explains patterns of representation – of women and ethnic minorities – in government cabinets? The authors argue governments diversify their cabinets when (1) a minority group is sizable and can mobilize (political competition); and/or (2) the general population believes in and expects the inclusion of minorities (popular norms).

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Summary

Examines the representation of women and ethnic minorities in government cabinets, using original data spanning Asia and Europe (1960-2015).

What explains patterns of representation – of women and ethnic minorities – in government cabinets? The authors argue governments diversify their cabinets when (1) a minority group is sizable and can mobilize (political competition); and/or (2) the general population believes in and expects the inclusion of minorities (popular norms).

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Description

What explains patterns of representation – of women and ethnic minorities – in government cabinets? The authors argue governments diversify their cabinets when (1) a minority group – and it need not be ethnic – is sizable and can mobilize (political competition); and/or (2) the general population believes in and expects the inclusion of minorities (popular norms). The authors test their argument using original cabinet data from Asia and Europe (N=93) 1960-2015 and a most-similar design of four case studies. They identify the gender and ethnicity of 91,000 country-year-minister observations – with consideration of the rank of their ministerial portfolio. They find evidence that in countries where there is political competition and/or popular norms, cabinets have fewer double-hegemons. However, this does not necessarily suggest minorities are holding portfolios of substantive prestige. This project offers a way to study intersectionality in democratic representation and political institutions.

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Product Details

Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Published
30th January 2025
Pages
102
ISBN
9781009570473

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