2021
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3947099
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Success Beyond Gender Quotas: Gender, Local Politics, and Clientelism in Morocco

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In 1997, before the quota, two women won district‐level seats, representing 0.6% of seats in parliament, whereas seven or 2.3% won in 2007 (Darhour & Dahlerup, 2013, p. 136) 10. Barnett and Shalaby (2021) find that 132 women were elected outside of the quota in the 2015 municipal elections in Morocco, with larger municipalities (>35,000 persons) that use proportional representation more likely to elect women off the quota than smaller municipalities using single‐member districts. Often, however, the progress is uneven and nonlinear.…”
Section: The Impact Of Gender Quotas In Menamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1997, before the quota, two women won district‐level seats, representing 0.6% of seats in parliament, whereas seven or 2.3% won in 2007 (Darhour & Dahlerup, 2013, p. 136) 10. Barnett and Shalaby (2021) find that 132 women were elected outside of the quota in the 2015 municipal elections in Morocco, with larger municipalities (>35,000 persons) that use proportional representation more likely to elect women off the quota than smaller municipalities using single‐member districts. Often, however, the progress is uneven and nonlinear.…”
Section: The Impact Of Gender Quotas In Menamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, Shalaby and Elimam (2020) partly attribute the increase in representation within the Middle East in the past decades to the adoption of gender quotas in Algeria, Jordon and Morocco. However, Barnett and Shalaby (2021) acknowledge that clientelism still impedes women's participation beyond gender quotas as men are still perceived as better service providers.…”
Section: Literature Review: Gender Quotas In the Middle East And Wome...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholarship on the Middle East has looked more broadly at the impact of gender quotas on the descriptive representation of women (Lu & Lu, 2020; Barnett & Shalaby, 2021; Shalaby & Elimam, 2020). The unique contextual factors within the region, including the prevalence of patriarchal norms, clientelism and tribalism and authoritarian rule have influenced how gender quotas impacted representation, particularly descriptive representation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the evidence for widespread clientele networks within local governance bodies (Barnett and Shalaby, 2021;Clark, 2018), and the influence of clientele relations and the quality of service delivery for shaping trust in institutions (Brixi et al, 2015;Buehler, 2016) the literature does not pay sufficient attention to how such networks interact with partisanship in transitioning settings (who gets what? ), or their ramifications for facilitating democratic institutions.…”
Section: Clientelism In the Mena Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Through “networks of dependency”, the clientele relations have continued to operate within post-Arab uprising settings (Elvira et al, 2018), shaping the popularity of Islamist parties (Cammett and Luong, 2014), citizen engagement with the judiciary (Buehler, 2016), gender-based representation (Barnett and Shalaby, 2021), and citizen mobilization, such as turning out to vote (De Miguel et al, 2015), engaging in demonstrations or attending campaign rallies (Ciftci and Bernick, 2015).…”
Section: Clientelism In the Mena Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%