2018
DOI: 10.1177/0010414018758767
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In Whose Interest? Gender and Mass–Elite Priority Congruence in Sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract: Do men and women representatives hold different legislative priorities? Do these priorities align with citizens who share their gender? Whereas substantive representation theorists suggest legislators' priorities should align with their cogender constituents, Downsian-based theories suggest no role for gender. We test these differing expectations through a new originally collected survey data set of more than 800 parliamentarians and data from more than 19,000 citizens from 17 sub-Saharan African countries. We… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…The literature on descriptive representation has highlighted the prevailing numeric underrepresentation of women in legislatures globally, but it has also particularly focused on how certain institutional solutions, such as gender quotas, may enhance the number of women in representative institutions (Tripp and Kang 2008). The literature on substantive representation, on the other hand, has focused more on how the interests of women citizens are advanced by increased female political representation Clayton et al 2019;Mansbridge 1999;Nwankwor 2019).…”
Section: Beyond Thin Parliamentary Representationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature on descriptive representation has highlighted the prevailing numeric underrepresentation of women in legislatures globally, but it has also particularly focused on how certain institutional solutions, such as gender quotas, may enhance the number of women in representative institutions (Tripp and Kang 2008). The literature on substantive representation, on the other hand, has focused more on how the interests of women citizens are advanced by increased female political representation Clayton et al 2019;Mansbridge 1999;Nwankwor 2019).…”
Section: Beyond Thin Parliamentary Representationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research across a diverse set of cases suggests men and women citizens and politicians hold different policy priorities. The most consistently observed division in the developing world is men’s relative prioritization of infrastructure projects and women’s relative prioritization of access to potable water and improvements in women’s rights (Chattopadhyay & Duflo, 2004; Clayton, Josefsson, Mattes, & Mozaffar, 2018; Gottlieb, Grossman, & Robinson, 2018). 5 Citizens may expect councilors to represent gender-specific policy priorities (e.g., for men to prioritize infrastructure and women to prioritize water and issues related to women’s rights).…”
Section: Voter Demand For Women Candidatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, men are more likely to prioritize the management of the economy, infrastructure, agriculture, violence, and social and political rights. Clayton, Josefsson, Mattes and Mozaffar (2018) find support for such differences and also present evidence for mass-elite policy congruence along gendered lines.…”
Section: Substantive Representation and Divergent Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 52%