“…This association follows from traditional ideas about the distribution of labor between men and women, with feminine policy areas including, for example, child care, elderly care, or education, and masculine policy areas including, for example, budget, internal and external security, or economy (Escobar-Lemmon and Taylor-Robinson, 2009, Krook and O’Brien, 2012). Even nowadays, women are more likely to be interested and to be perceived as competent actors in “feminine” policy areas (see, e.g., Goddard, 2019, Espírito-Santo and Sanches, 2019, Goodwin et al, 2021). To the extent that women’s substantive representation entails engaging with issues clearly in their gender’s traditional area of responsibility (e.g., family), men might perceive it as inappropriate to speak for women if large numbers of women are present.…”