“…A growing literature (e.g., Barnes & O'Brien, ; Davis, ; Escobar‐Lemmon & Taylor‐Robinson, ; Jacob, Scherpereel, & Adams, ; Krook & O'Brien, ; Mavisakalyan, ; Reynolds, ; Siaroff, ; Whitford, Wilkins, & Ball, ) has started to look at the macro‐level factors, such as the type of governmental system; the meso‐level indicators, such as type of party in power (e.g., left‐wing or right‐wing party); and the micro‐level determinants, such as the ambition of men and women to run for office, to explain women's recruitment to ministerial portfolios. Though several works mention the role of informal procedures in “engendering” recruitment to the executive (e.g., Annesley & Gains, ; Arriola & Johnson, ; Bauer & Okpotor, ; Bauer & Tremblay, ; Bego, ; Claveria, ; Escobar‐Lemmon & Taylor‐Robinson, ; Franceschet & Thomas, ), no study has so far examined the influence of corruption on women's representation in cabinets across time and space; our study is the first to conduct such an analysis.…”