Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-tj2md Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T17:57:43.471Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Opening Up the Black Box: Gender and Candidate Selection in a New Era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2016

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Recent global developments, including the feminization of parliaments and the rise of gender quotas, have transformed the ways in which parties and legislatures operate. This introduction to the special issue ‘Candidate Selection: Parties and Legislatures in a New Era’ puts these recent developments in context, making the case for revisiting the ‘secret garden’ of candidate selection in light of this ‘new era’ in politics. It sets out a critical dialogue between party politics and gender politics scholarship and points to the need for more research on how political parties facilitate or block women’s access to political office. Building on the burgeoning research on gender and political recruitment, it outlines how a gendered and institutional approach allows us to retheorize candidate selection processes and opens up new avenues for empirically examining the pathways prior to election. The article then introduces the papers in this special issue and concludes by evaluating the main implications of gendering analyses of candidate selection and party politics more broadly.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s). Published by Government and Opposition Limited and Cambridge University Press 2016 

The feminization of politics – that is, the political inclusion of women and women’s policy concerns – has transformed the social and political context within which parties and legislatures operate. Women activists have been key players in debates over political representation and constitutional and institutional design around the world and have mobilized in social movements at the local, national and global level, as well as within formal organizations such as political parties (Krook Reference Krook2006). While women are still numerically under-represented in politics, the overall trend is upward, and dramatic jumps in women’s political presence have occurred in a diverse range of countries worldwide.

What explains these trends? A key factor has been the adoption of reform measures such as gender quotas, aimed at increasing the selection and election of female candidates. The global spread of gender quotas can be traced back to the Fourth UN World Conference on Women, held in Beijing in 1995. The resulting Platform for Action recommended that governments should ‘take measures to ensure women’s equal access to and full participation in power structures and decision-making’, while also increasing ‘women’s capacity to participate in decision-making and leadership’ (United Nations 1995). This represented a significant discursive turning point in national and international debates over women in politics, legitimizing women’s movement campaigns for gender quotas around the world. Indeed, post-Beijing, quotas have become a global trend – they are currently applied in over 100 countries and are now in their ‘second’ and ‘third’ generation in many cases (see Franceschet et al. Reference Franceschet, Krook and Piscopo2012; Krook Reference Krook2009 for comprehensive overviews).

Almost every pluralist democracy uses gender quotas, either in the form of (voluntary) party quotas or statutory quotas introduced by regular legislation, electoral system reforms or constitutional amendments. The inclusion of women in political decision-making is also increasingly seen as a prerequisite for democracy, with gender quotas introduced in post-conflict and transition to democracy contexts, as well as in hybrid regimes (Dahlerup Reference Dahlerup2006). Yet, while research in this area highlights the significant impact of these measures on levels of women representatives, it also demonstrates that gender balance is far from achieved. Gains remain slow and incremental, and many countries have seen either stagnation or reversals in their numbers of women parliamentarians (Dahlerup and Leyenaar Reference Dahlerup and Leyenaar2013).

The worldwide diffusion of gender quotas establishes a ‘new era’ for political parties and parliaments. In most countries parties are the key gatekeepers to political office, in that they have almost exclusive control over which candidates are recruited and selected (Norris and Lovenduski Reference Norris and Lovenduski1995). Quota reforms, then, challenge the very core of the relationship between voters, parties and representatives (cf. Dahlerup Reference Dahlerup2006) and force political parties to revise their selection practices in light of gender criteria. Yet, while gender quotas and the broader feminization of party politics are a major global development, most studies of political parties continue to be notably silent on issues of women and gender. The relationship between gender and political parties has not been extensively theorized in mainstream studies of candidate selection specifically, or in party politics scholarship more generally. Meanwhile, though the importance of the candidate selection process is widely recognized in the gender and politics literature, there have been relatively few studies that directly examine the role of political parties in shaping women’s representation.

This article seeks to fill this gap by revisiting the ‘secret garden’ of candidate selection and investigating the central question of how political parties facilitate or block women’s access to political office. We first examine the existing divide between gender politics and party politics scholarship, highlighting the tendency of these two fields to talk past, rather than to, each other. Building on the burgeoning research on gender and political recruitment, we discuss the ways in which a gendered perspective opens up new directions for theorizing the dynamics of candidate selection and recruitment – focusing on how gender ‘makes’ parties, but parties also ‘make’ gender. We move on to consider how scholars might bridge the gap between gender and party politics scholarship and set out the main components of a ‘feminist institutionalist’ approach to studying candidate selection, one that is firmly focused on the gendered and institutional dimensions of the opportunity structures within parties. We conclude by introducing the articles in this special issue, outlining how they deal with various aspects of the relationship between gender, institutions and candidate selection, and highlighting the wider implications of the special issue for research on the critical pathways prior to political office.

GENDER AND PARTY POLITICS SCHOLARS: TALKING PAST EACH OTHER?

Candidate selection is at the core of what political parties stand for and what they do (cf. Ranney Reference Ranney1981: 103) – it ‘influences the balance of power within the party, determines the composition of parliaments, and impacts on the behaviour of legislators’ (Hazan and Rahat Reference Hazan and Rahat2010: 3). Yet, while the important role of parties in shaping access to political office is widely recognized, there have been surprisingly few systematic studies into the ‘secret garden’ of candidate selection and recruitment. Meanwhile, those classic studies of candidate selection that do exist were largely undertaken before the global surge in gender quotas from the mid-1990s onwards (see, for example, Gallagher and Marsh Reference Gallagher and Marsh1988; Lovenduski and Norris Reference Lovenduski and Norris1993; Norris Reference Norris1997; Norris and Lovenduski Reference Norris and Lovenduski1995).

Access to political office has long been a core research area within gender politics scholarship, with much of the literature in this area seeking to understand why women are under-represented in political institutions. However, until rather recently, this literature has tended to focus on legislatures rather than on political parties (Childs Reference Childs2013: 81) and has over-emphasized the importance of political, socioeconomic and cultural variables in explaining cross-national variations in levels of women representatives (see, for example, Inglehart and Norris Reference Inglehart and Norris2003; McAllister and Studlar Reference McAllister and Studlar2002; Reynolds Reference Reynolds1999; Tripp and Kang Reference Tripp and Kang2008). In doing so, these studies have often missed significant within-country variations between political parties, overlooking the fact that individual parties differ in the number of female candidates they nominate and the proportion of women they send to parliament (Caul Reference Caul1999; Kittilson Reference Kittilson2006).

This work is supplemented by a burgeoning body of research on the origins and impact of gender quotas, as the most visible and direct mechanisms used to increase women’s political presence (see, for example, Dahlerup Reference Dahlerup2006; Franceschet et al. Reference Franceschet, Krook and Piscopo2012; Krook Reference Krook2009). Scholars working in this area have offered several explanations for variations in quota adoption and implementation, including, for example, the importance of women’s mobilization inside and outside parties (Kittilson Reference Kittilson2006); cultural norms and understandings of equality and representation (Davidson-Schmich Reference Davidson-Schmich2006); and pressures from international organizations (Krook Reference Krook2006). Yet, while electoral quotas are intended to counter gender biases in the distribution of political positions, the literature on gender quotas has tended to underplay the importance of internal party dynamics, the arena in which the politics of distribution is ultimately played out (Kenny Reference Kenny2013: 182; see also Verge and de la Fuente Reference Verge, Espírito-Santo and de la Fuente2014). As several scholars have noted, the relationship between political parties and gender quotas has not been extensively theorized, and the intraparty mechanisms that explain how quotas are effectively adopted and implemented in practice remain largely unexplored (but see Davidson-Schmich Reference Davidson-Schmich2006; Kenny and Verge Reference Kenny and Verge2013; Murray Reference Murray2010; Threlfall Reference Threlfall2007).

As posited by Baer (Reference Baer1993: 562), ‘for a party scholar, the concept of political party in women and politics research is missing where one would most expect it – in studies of recruitment and public office holding’. We can similarly argue that, for a gender politics scholar, the concept of gender is also missing where one would most expect it – in mainstream studies of candidate selection and intraparty power struggles. When party politics scholars have looked at the crucial pathways of candidate selection and recruitment, they have generally failed to engage with issues of women and gender. For example, power struggles within the party organization are usually identified with regard to leadership contests and factional disputes (Boucek Reference Boucek2009; Harmel and Tan Reference Harmel and Tan2003), or the division of power between the central party and its regional and/or local branches (Hough and Jeffery Reference Hough and Jeffery2006; Swenden and Maddens Reference Swenden and Maddens2009). In both cases, the logics of office-seeking versus policy-seeking are applied as motivations for taking over or influencing leadership contests, as well as for preserving or expanding decision-making autonomy in matters of policy, strategy and candidate selection.

In most of this research, those who define the conditions for action and who participate in party factions and coalition-building – the activist, the middle-level cadre, the leader, the aspirant, or the selector – are assumed to be gender-neutral and disembodied actors (cf. Verge Reference Verge2015). In other words, the question of ‘who is present’ in these deal-making processes is assumed not to matter. Accordingly, party politics scholars have generally failed to consider the extent to which female members are integrated and have influence and power within the party structure, and the resulting implications for wider understandings of party characteristics and party change (cf. Childs Reference Childs2008, Reference Childs2013; Young Reference Young2000). Meanwhile, those few works that do take women into account tend to fall back on the dichotomous variable of sex, rather than integrate gender more systematically into their analysis (see, for example, Katz and Mair Reference Katz and Mair1995; Webb et al. Reference Webb, Farrell and Holliday2002). In doing so, most party politics scholars have failed to acknowledge the extent to which parties’ ideologies, organizational structures, procedures and practices are ‘saturated with gender’, as well as the ways in which the experiences of actors within political parties also vary according to both sex and gender (Childs Reference Childs2008: xix; cf. Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005). We expand on this argument in the following section.

HOW GENDER MAKES PARTIES AND HOW PARTIES MAKE GENDER

As Carver (Reference Carver1996) reminds us, gender is not a synonym for women. Rather, gender can be understood as a constitutive element of social relations based upon perceived (socially constructed and culturally variable) differences between women and men, and as a primary way of signifying (and naturalizing) relationships of power and hierarchy (Scott Reference Scott1986: 1067). From an analytical perspective, gender can therefore be seen as a useful ‘category’ to examine and identify the socially constructed (rather than natural or given) institutional roles, identities and practices conceived of as ‘masculine’ or ‘feminine’ in particular contexts (Beckwith Reference Beckwith2005: 131). Yet, gender not only operates at the interpersonal level, but is also a feature of institutions and social structures, and a part of the symbolic realm where gender meanings are constructed (Kenny Reference Kenny2013: 37). To say that an institution is ‘gendered’ then means that constructions of masculinity and femininity are intertwined in the daily culture or ‘logic’ of political institutions, rather than ‘existing out in society or fixed within individuals which they then bring whole to the institution’ (Kenney Reference Kenney1996: 456; see also Kenny Reference Kenny2013). Gender can therefore also be conceived as a ‘process’ through which structures and policies may have a differential impact upon women and men, while also providing different opportunities to female and male actors seeking favourable gendered outcomes (Beckwith Reference Beckwith2005: 132).

These wider theoretical insights have been taken up by recent studies on gender and political recruitment, where the focus has shifted from studying ‘women in’ to ‘gender and’ political parties (see, for example, Bjarnegård Reference Bjarnegård2013; Hinojosa Reference Hinojosa2012; Kenny Reference Kenny2013; Kittilson Reference Kittilson2006; Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005; Murray Reference Murray2010; Verge and de la Fuente Reference Verge, Espírito-Santo and de la Fuente2014). In doing so, many of these scholars have drawn upon the insights of ‘feminist institutionalism’, an emerging variant of new institutional theory which seeks to ‘include women as actors in political processes, to “gender” institutionalism, and to move the research agenda towards questions about the interplay between gender and the operation and effect of political institutions’ (Mackay et al. Reference Mackay, Kenny and Chappell2010: 574). Institutions, in this view, are not gender neutral, rather they reflect and reinforce power inequalities (cf. Kenny Reference Kenny2007). This is particularly the case for political parties, which have historically been dominated by men and which are, as a result, characterized by traditional (and often unacknowledged) conceptions of gender relations that generally disadvantage women. Indeed, as Lovenduski (Reference Lovenduski2005: 56) notes: ‘If parliament is the warehouse of traditional masculinity . . . political parties are its major distributors’.

The ‘institutional turn’ in research on gender and candidate selection is rooted in the pioneering scholarship of Pippa Norris and Joni Lovenduski, evidenced in their classic (1995) work Political Recruitment: Gender, Race and Class in the British Parliament. This text represents one of the first (and only) systematic studies into the ‘shadowy pathways’ prior to political office in either the gender politics or party politics fields, and has yet to be replicated on the same scale. In Norris and Lovenduski’s framework, the outcome of particular parties’ selection processes can be understood in terms of the interaction between the supply of candidates wishing to stand for office and the demands of party gatekeepers who select the candidates. In attempting to systematically theorize the political recruitment process, Norris and Lovenduski emphasize that political parties do not operate within a vacuum; rather, supply and demand play out within a wider framework of party recruitment processes, which are shaped and structured by the broader political system (see also Norris Reference Norris1997). Supply and demand are therefore interactive processes that produce specific gendered outcomes, namely the under-representation of women as aspirants, candidates and eventually elected politicians.

What is the value-added of a feminist institutionalist approach to the study of candidate selection and recruitment? To answer this question, we adapt Vickers’ (Reference Vickers2013) theoretical framework of how ‘gender makes institutions’ and ‘institutions make gender’ to political parties. Figure 1 illustrates the key components of the processes through which gender makes parties and parties make gender. We argue that gender makes parties with regard to both the ‘supply’ and ‘demand’ factors underpinning candidate selection processes and broader party organizational dynamics. On the supply side, due to wider systemic factors such as the public–private divide, the sexual segregation of the workforce and patterns of gender socialization, we might expect aspiring women candidates to have less time, money, ambition and confidence than their male counterparts to run as candidates (Norris and Lovenduski Reference Norris and Lovenduski1995). For example, a notable recent study finds that women in American politics – despite sharing similar qualifications and experiences to their male counterparts – are much less likely than men to consider running for office or to put themselves forward as candidates (Lawless and Fox Reference Lawless and Fox2010).

Figure 1 How Gender Makes Parties and Parties Make Gender

Ingrained social gender ideologies also shape the direct or imputed prejudices of party selectors, leading to social bias in parliaments, as demand-side explanations suggest (Norris and Lovenduski Reference Norris and Lovenduski1995: 106–8). In other words, parties institutionalize ideas about politics that have gendered implications (Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005). Some studies find that party elites typically list stereotypically masculine characteristics when asked to describe a ‘good leader’ or a ‘good candidate’ (see, for example, Tremblay and Pelletier Reference Tremblay and Pelletier2001). Others demonstrate that male party elites tend to recruit fewer women than men because of an out-group effect, basing their candidate evaluations on stereotypes about women as a whole, and as a result, generally perceiving female candidates to be less competent than their male counterparts. In contrast, male candidates are seen as in-group members and are assumed to be politically competent (Niven Reference Niven1998). Women’s exclusion from the distribution of rewards (political positions) therefore often builds on psychological considerations deeply rooted in society about gender roles that make men see other men as more likeable and reliable peers when recruiting candidates for public office (Bjarnegård Reference Bjarnegård2013). In a similar vein, the late-hour meetings typically entrenched in party culture clearly reflect male schedules or wifely support, which makes individuals with fewer family responsibilities – due to the current sexual division of labour, those would typically be men – more likely to join and to be active participants of political parties (Franceschet Reference Franceschet2005; Verge and de la Fuente Reference Verge, Espírito-Santo and de la Fuente2014).

Equally important, we argue that parties make gender. This is not to say that political parties only represent male interests and always operate to oppress women, or that all men are in dominant positions in party politics while all women are in subordinate ones (cf. Kenny Reference Kenny2013). Rather, the historical exclusion of women from political parties, institutions and public life has ‘permitted a set of male-centred institutional practices to evolve without comment or protest’ (Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005: 27) – practices which have palpable effects. One of the most fundamental (and often invisible) by-products of men’s historical domination of political parties (including party membership, party leadership and candidate selection committees) has been their ability to set the institutional ‘rules of the game’ (Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005: 27). This, in turn, produces gendered outcomes, shaping the opportunities for both men and women to be selected and elected and to advance through the party ranks. While these gendered barriers are, on the one hand, a reflection of wider disadvantages that women face in society at large, they are compounded by party cultures that have ‘institutionalized codes of behaviour that make discrimination against women both possible and acceptable’ (Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005: 81).

In the early stages of the candidate selection process, for example, parties have significant influence over who decides to run for office – often informally encouraging particular candidates to run, or more indirectly, sending signals about what kind of candidates would ‘fit in’ with the party (Cheng and Tavits Reference Cheng and Tavits2011: 467; see also Niven Reference Niven1998). The evidence suggests not only that male party leaders prefer, but also that they actively support and promote the nomination of male candidates, with women much less likely to be approached to run for office than their male counterparts (Carroll and Sanbonmatsu Reference Carroll and Sanbonmatsu2013; Dittmar Reference Dittmar2015; Lawless and Fox Reference Lawless and Fox2010). Many of the qualities sought by candidate selectors also indirectly favour men over women, with formal and informal selection criteria on the demand side – such as party service, resources, experience and leadership traits – shaping the supply of candidates along gendered lines (Kenny Reference Kenny2013; Verge Reference Verge2015). Once women decide to stand for office, there is ample evidence that they face both direct and indirect discrimination from party selectors in the candidate selection process – ranging from gendered assumptions regarding women’s traditional roles to explicit sexual harassment (see, for example, Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005). Finally, once women are selected, political parties are much more likely to run them as ‘sacrificial lambs’ in unwinnable seats or positions on party lists (Luhiste Reference Luhiste2015; Murray Reference Murray2010). This, in turn, may reinforce the notion that women are not ‘suitable’ for political office, while further discouraging prospective female candidates from entering the political arena (Ryan et al. Reference Ryan, Haslam, Alexander and Kulich2010).

One possible way to surmount these barriers, as advanced by some scholars, is to increase the number of women in party leadership positions (see, for example, Cheng and Tavits Reference Cheng and Tavits2011). Yet this is no guarantee of positive change; there are many cases where the numerical feminization of party executive bodies has not led to the feminization of party practices. Indeed, several studies point to how power in male-dominated political spaces may shift over time from formal to informal institutions, or to different institutional arenas, in order to counteract women’s increased access and presence in formal decision-making sites (Bjarnegård and Kenny Reference Bjarnegård and Kenny2015; Hawkesworth Reference Hawkesworth2005; Kenny Reference Kenny2013). Power inequalities in regard to access to resources and recognition often continue to be maintained through more informal ‘rules-in-use’ – including gendered norms or expectations of a ‘good’ leader, gendered rituals in party meetings that keep men conversationally dominant, and the subjection of women party officials to enhanced levels of scrutiny (Franceschet and Piscopo Reference Franceschet, Krook and Piscopo2014; Puwar Reference Puwar2004; Verge and de la Fuente Reference Verge, Espírito-Santo and de la Fuente2014).

Political parties must then be regarded as institutional spaces where gender is both produced and reproduced through a myriad of practices and norms – many of them informal – and that may also shift over time – for example, when gender quotas are adopted (Kenny Reference Kenny2013; Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005; Verge and de la Fuente Reference Verge, Espírito-Santo and de la Fuente2014). Simultaneously, the conceptualization of gender not only as a category but also as a process (Beckwith Reference Beckwith2005) allows us to pay attention as well to the ways in which gender-biased institutionalized frameworks can be challenged. Indeed, as the introduction of quotas shows, gender can be a source of party change and, as such, is likely to be resisted by organizations such as political parties that have historically proven to be largely conservative when it comes to change (Panebianco Reference Panebianco1988) and rather good at protecting their (male-dominated) cultures and procedures (Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski2005).

BRIDGING GENDER POLITICS AND PARTY POLITICS RESEARCH

Looking at party politics through a gendered lens inevitably changes the way we think about and analyse candidate selection. It fundamentally tells us that party politics is a site of power relations. The central questions of candidate selection and party politics scholarship – Who can be selected? Who selects the candidates? Who should select the candidates? Who participates? – cannot be fully addressed without reference to gender. Answering these questions requires an evaluation not only of women’s positional power within party structures, but also an evaluation of their power relative to that of their male peers (Childs Reference Childs2013: 93). For example, individuals’ interests and strategic calculations in selection processes cannot be generalized since they derive from their social, economic and political position, including the ways in which their private lives operate. The amount of resources at their disposal is also likely to shape their capacity for and types of collective mobilization (see Lovenduski Reference Lovenduski1998).

Acknowledging the impact of unequal gender relations, in turn, will allow party politics scholars to provide a more complete and accurate account of internal reform processes and intraparty power struggles. An example of this can be found in current debates over internal party democracy, the increasing trend among parties in Western democracies aimed at democratizing and decentralizing internal structures and candidate selection processes (see, for example, Cross and Katz Reference Cross and Katz2013; Hazan and Rahat Reference Hazan and Rahat2010; Rahat and Hazan Reference Rahat and Hazan2001). We would argue that any analysis of these trends is partial at best if attention is not paid to the discrimination faced by some groups with regard to their access and opportunities to participate effectively within the party organization. Indeed, as Sarah Childs (Reference Childs2013: 93) asks, ‘can a political party be judged internally democratic’ if women continue to be under-represented at all levels of the party?

More specifically, a gendered lens raises deeper and more critical questions about not only what constitutes internal party democracy, but also whether it has gendered effects (Childs Reference Childs2013). Young and Cross (Reference Young and Cross2002), for example, chart the rise of the ‘plebiscitary party’, in which parties have responded to a decline in conventional political participation by reforming their internal practices to include more direct involvement in decision-making (see also Seyd Reference Seyd1999). Yet this shift from group to individual representation has a gendered impact – party commitments to increasing the numbers of women and other marginalized groups in politics rely on ‘the acceptance of sex as a basis of group identity’ (Childs Reference Childs2013: 90; see also Krook and O’Brien Reference Krook and O’Brien2010). Indeed, Young and Cross (Reference Young and Cross2002: 689) find that women, ethnic minorities and young party members are less supportive of an undifferentiated conception of membership that denies the salience of group differences.

Similarly, trends to democratize and decentralize candidate selection procedures – including the introduction of broad-based membership ballots and primaries – have gendered consequences. However, those party politics scholars who have looked at the differential impact of primaries on women and men have contented themselves with highlighting that this selection method usually produces fewer women candidates and with providing relatively superficial explanations such as the underlying coordination problems of inclusive selectorates (Hazan and Rahat Reference Hazan and Rahat2010) and the conservative attitudes of party members towards women candidates (Rahat Reference Rahat2007). This focus on sex rather than on gender fails to notice the gendered processes embedded in primaries: this selection method tends to benefit incumbents, who are mostly men; inclusive selectorates (citizens or party members) typically vote for the most popular candidates, whose popularity cannot but reflect the vertical segregation within parties and institutions, as well as asymmetrical access to party patronage networks (Franceschet and Piscopo Reference Franceschet, Krook and Piscopo2014; Verge and de la Fuente Reference Verge, Espírito-Santo and de la Fuente2014). More crucially, it also misses, as previously highlighted, the fact that women are less likely to be encouraged to stand by party selectors (Carroll and Sanbonmatsu Reference Carroll and Sanbonmatsu2013; Lawless and Fox Reference Lawless and Fox2010).

Adopting a gendered lens also allows us to evaluate critically the ideals and goals of intraparty democracy. Gender quotas, for example, are in many ways the antithesis of internal party democracy – in that they are usually highly centralized ‘top-down’ party initiatives that run counter to traditional conceptions of ‘democratic’ candidate selection. Yet quotas are intended to counter gender biases in the distribution of political positions – indeed, as Childs (Reference Childs2013: 94) notes, preventing selectorate discrimination is their raison d’être. As already highlighted, the existence of discrimination against women candidates is well established, and even the adoption of formal rules such as gender quotas does not necessarily overcome all institutionalized forms of male bias, as informal party practices may undermine formal rule change (Bjarnegård and Kenny Reference Bjarnegård and Kenny2015; Kenny Reference Kenny2013). A gendered lens, then, raises the question as to whether there must necessarily be limits on intraparty democracy (as it is traditionally understood in the literature) in order to ensure the wider ‘good’ of ‘system-level democracy’ (Childs Reference Childs2013: 99).

We can see an example of these tensions in the multitude of ways in which parties often (formally) comply with the letter of gender quota laws while (informally) violating their spirit. In cases of quotas that do not have placement mandates, parties typically place women in hopeless seats or list positions, keeping the lion’s share of safe seats and winnable positions for male incumbents or male newcomers, which erodes the transformative potential of gender quotas (Murray Reference Murray2010; Ryan et al. Reference Ryan, Haslam, Alexander and Kulich2010). When quotas do have placement mandates, parties often fulfil the minimum requirements of the rules in terms of women’s representation, but go no further than this (Verge Reference Verge2013). Political parties have also developed expertise in exploiting the legal loopholes of electoral and quota rules. Mexico’s ‘first generation’ quota law, for example, exempted parties from applying gender quotas in direct votes or primary elections. Parties made extensive use of this ‘escape clause’, which resulted in strongly masculinized candidacies but also meant that they were able to avoid scrutiny as to how open these primary elections really were (Baldez Reference Baldez2007; see also Johnson Reference Johnson2016 and Piscopo Reference Piscopo2016, both in this issue). In some cases, parties have gone so far as to directly break quota laws – for example, by putting men candidates as alternates of women candidates and have the latter resign once elected but before taking office, as has happened in Mexico (Hinojosa Reference Hinojosa2012; see also Piscopo Reference Piscopo2016, in this issue), or by entering male candidate names under female names, as in the case of Bolivia (Albaine Reference Albaine2009).

More research is needed, then, to open up the ‘black box’ of candidate selection and to identify and empirically investigate the ways in which parties facilitate or block women’s access to political office. In one way or another, all of the contributors in this special issue seek to fill this gap, bridging the intersection between gender politics and party politics scholarship. Starting from the question ‘what does a gendered perspective tell us about party politics?’, the special issue points to several new directions for theorizing and empirically examining the dynamics of candidate selection. On the one hand, given that selection processes do not take place in a vacuum, the party organization as an institutional setting that shapes gendered patterns of candidate selection must be more thoroughly examined. On the other hand, empirical analyses must take into account informal rules and their interaction with the formal rules of the selection process and how these enable or constrain men’s and women’s political participation, an issue of paramount importance after the global expansion of gender quotas.

Adopting a broadly ‘feminist institutionalist’ approach – focusing on the gendered and institutional dimensions of the opportunity structures within parties – the ‘secret garden’ of candidate selection is surveyed in a comparative perspective, either across parties or across countries, covering a broad range of empirical case studies, including Western Europe (where most work on recruitment has traditionally focused), but also Latin America, Asia and Africa. Specifically, contributors examine how gender shapes the structures, practices and rules of political recruitment (both formal and informal), including its intersection with other axes of power such as race/ethnicity where applicable. In doing so, they not only shed light into the gendered politics of advantage and disadvantage within parties, but also provide insights into how these power hierarchies and structures might eventually be dismantled.

Elin Bjarnegård and Meryl Kenny’s (Reference Bjarnegård and Kenny2016, in this issue) agenda-setting piece sets out the theoretical and methodological challenges of researching candidate selection in comparative perspective and explores these dynamics by revisiting original in-depth research in two very different contexts: Thailand and Scotland. Subsequent contributions provide in-depth empirical analyses of the pathways prior to political office and highlight a number of strategies that researchers might use to surmount the comparative challenges identified by Bjarnegård and Kenny – for example, comparing multiple parties within a country over time; situating the findings of individual cases within existing research and regional patterns to pull out similarities and differences; or carrying out structured small-n cross-country comparisons. Niki Johnson’s (Reference Johnson2016, in this issue) study of candidate selection in Uruguay highlights the ways in which male power monopolies are discursively constructed and then practically implemented and sustained over time in different political parties in spite of gender quota reforms. Meanwhile, Tània Verge and Ana Espírito-Santo’s (Reference Verge and Espírito-Santo2016, in this issue) study of Spain and Portugal unpacks the interactions between legislative and party quotas and identifies the practices and norms that hinder effective compliance with these measures. Francesca Refsum Jensenius’ (Reference Jensenius2016, in this issue) contribution tackles the issue of intersectionality in candidate selection and exposes the gendered political opportunity structures that make reserved seats in India more accessible to women candidates than regular seats. Elin Bjarnegård and Pår Zetterberg (Reference Bjarnegård, Kenny and Zetterberg2016, in this issue) look at the role of party gatekeepers in hybrid regimes, showing how the uneven playing field in which political parties compete affects the implementation of reserved seats for women in Tanzania.

While all of the contributions highlight the active and ongoing ways in which gender is reinscribed in political parties, they also point to possibilities for these institutions to be ‘re-gendered’ in a positive direction. In this vein, Jennifer M. Piscopo’s (Reference Piscopo2016, in this issue) analysis of gender and candidate selection in Mexico demonstrates how women’s agency through informal means such as cross-party networks in conjunction with state regulators has produced significant advances in gender quota implementation. Finally, the last of the seven original articles, by Joni Lovenduski (Reference Lovenduski2016, in this issue), offers a more reflective and personal look at the development of the field of gender and political recruitment, focusing particularly on the theoretical and methodological underpinnings of the dominant framework in the field, the supply and demand model. Lovenduski reminds us that as we look forward to new and exciting directions for work on gender and political recruitment, we should also remember to look backwards, building on earlier feminist scholarship in the field, while also pushing and developing this work further in order to advance comparative research and improve data collection.

CONCLUSIONS

This article has identified the ‘missing link’ between party politics and gender politics scholarship, arguing that they must speak to, rather than past, each other. Bridging the intersection between both strands of literature allows scholars to reflect on how power is played out, to expose its reproduction, regeneration and maintenance and to unpick how, why and with what effects the institutions and processes surrounding political recruitment and candidate selection are gendered (as well as their relationship with other axes of inequality). A gendered lens is therefore crucial if we want to fully open up the ‘black box’ of candidate selection – it provides a more comprehensive account of the practices, goals and outcomes of the candidate selection process; the dynamics of internal reform processes and intraparty power struggles; and the general and gendered mechanisms of institutional continuity and change. As Lovenduski (Reference Lovenduski2016) reminds us in the concluding article of this special issue, ‘it is not enough for us to know that parties may discriminate against women; we need also to know via what mechanisms and configurations the discrimination operates and what is at stake’. The contributions to this special issue take up this challenge, pointing to new directions for theorizing the relationship between gender and political parties, and generating a range of new data and insights into the ‘secret garden’ of candidate selection around the world.

Footnotes

*

Meryl Kenny is a Lecturer in Gender and Politics in the School of Social and Political Science at the University of Edinburgh. Contact email: M.Kenny@ed.ac.uk.

Tània Verge is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political and Social Sciences at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Contact email: tania.verge@upf.edu.

References

Albaine, L. (2009), ‘Cuotas de género y ciudadanía política en Bolivia’, Margen, 55: 110.Google Scholar
Baer, D.L. (1993), ‘Political Parties: The Missing Variable in Women and Politics Research’, Political Research Quarterly, 46(3): 547576.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baldez, L. (2007), ‘Primaries v. Quotas: Gender and Candidate Nominations in Mexico, 2003’, Latin American Politics and Society, 49(3): 6996.Google Scholar
Beckwith, K. (2005), ‘A Common Language of Gender’, Politics and Gender, 1(1): 128137.Google Scholar
Bjarnegård, E. (2013), Gender, Informal Institutions and Political Recruitment: Explaining Male Dominance in Parliamentary Representation (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).Google Scholar
Bjarnegård, E. and Kenny, M. (2015), ‘Revealing the Secret Garden: The Informal Dimensions of Political Recruitment’, Politics and Gender, 11(4): 748753.Google Scholar
Bjarnegård, E. and Kenny, M. (2016), ‘Comparing Candidate Selection: A Feminist Institutionalist Approach’, Government and Opposition, 51(3): 370392.Google Scholar
Bjarnegård, E., Kenny, M. and Zetterberg, P. (2016), ‘Gender Equality Reforms on an Uneven Playing Field: Candidate Selection and Quota Implementation in Electoral Authoritarian Tanzania’, Government and Opposition, 51(3): 464486.Google Scholar
Boucek, F. (2009), ‘Rethinking Factionalism: Typologies, Intra-Party Dynamics and Three Faces of Factionalism’, Party Politics, 15(4): 131.Google Scholar
Carroll, S.J. and Sanbonmatsu, K. (2013), More Women Can Run: Gender and Pathways to the State Legislatures (New York: Oxford University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carver, T. (1996), Gender is Not a Synonym for Women (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner).Google Scholar
Caul, M. (1999), ‘Women’s Representation in Parliament: The Role of Political Parties’, Party Politics, 5(1): 7998.Google Scholar
Cheng, C. and Tavits, M. (2011), ‘Informal Influences in Selecting Female Political Candidates’, Political Research Quarterly, 64(2): 460471.Google Scholar
Childs, S. (2008), Women and British Party Politics (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Childs, S. (2013), ‘Intraparty Democracy: A Gendered Critique and a Feminist Agenda’, in W. Cross and R. Katz (eds), The Challenges of Intra-Party Democracy (Oxford: Oxford University Press): 8199.Google Scholar
Cross, W. and Katz, R. (2013) (eds), The Challenges of Intra-Party Democracy (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Dahlerup, D. (2006) (ed.), Women, Quotas and Politics (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Dahlerup, D. and Leyenaar, M. (2013) (eds), Breaking Male Dominance in Old Democracies (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Davidson-Schmich, L. (2006), ‘Implementation of Political Party Gender Quotas: Evidence from the German Länder 1990–2000’, Party Politics, 12(2): 211232.Google Scholar
Dittmar, K. (2015), ‘Encouragement Is Not Enough: Addressing Social and Structural Barriers to Female Candidate Recruitment’, Politics and Gender, 11(4): 759765.Google Scholar
Franceschet, S. (2005), Women and Politics in Chile (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner).Google Scholar
Franceschet, S., Krook, M.L. and Piscopo, J.M. (2012) (eds), The Impact of Gender Quotas (New York: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Franceschet, S., Krook, M.L. and Piscopo, J. (2014), ‘Sustaining Gendered Practices? Power and Elite Networks in Argentina’, Comparative Political Studies, 47(1): 85110.Google Scholar
Gallagher, M. and Marsh, M. (1988) (eds), Candidate Selection in Comparative Perspective: The Secret Garden of Politics (London: Sage).Google Scholar
Harmel, R. and Tan, A. (2003), ‘Party Actors and Party Change: Does Factional Dominance Matter?’, European Journal of Political Research, 42(3): 409424.Google Scholar
Hawkesworth, M. (2005), ‘Engendering Political Science: An Immodest Proposal’, Politics and Gender, 1(1): 141156.Google Scholar
Hazan, R.Y. and Rahat, G. (2010), Democracy Within Parties: Candidate Selection Methods and their Political Consequences (New York: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Hinojosa, M. (2012), Selecting Women, Electing Women (Philadelphia: Temple University Press).Google Scholar
Hough, D. and Jeffery, C. (2006) (eds), Devolution and Electoral Politics: A Comparative Exploration (Manchester: Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
Inglehart, R. and Norris, P. (2003), Rising Tide: Gender Equality and Cultural Change Around the World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Jensenius, F.R. (2016), ‘Competing Inequalities? On the Intersection of Gender and Ethnicity in Candidate Nominations in Indian Elections’, Government and Opposition, 51(3): 440463.Google Scholar
Johnson, N. (2016), ‘Keeping Men In, Shutting Women Out: Gender Biases in Candidate Selection Processes in Uruguay’, Government and Opposition, 51(3): 393415.Google Scholar
Katz, R.S. and Mair, P. (1995), How Parties Organize: Change and Adaptation in Party Organizations in Western Democracies (London: Sage).Google Scholar
Kenney, S.J. (1996), ‘New Research on Gendered Political Institutions’, Political Research Quarterly, 49(2): 445466.Google Scholar
Kenny, M. (2007), ‘Gender, Institutions and Power: A Critical Review’, Politics, 27(2): 91100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenny, M. (2013), Gender and Political Recruitment: Theorizing Institutional Change (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).Google Scholar
Kenny, M. and Verge, T. (2013), ‘Decentralization, Political Parties and Women’s Representation: Evidence from Spain and Britain’, Publius: The Journal of Federalism, 43(1): 109128.Google Scholar
Kittilson, M.C. (2006), Challenging Parties, Changing Parliaments: Women and Elected Office in Contemporary Western Europe (Columbus: Ohio State University Press).Google Scholar
Krook, M.L. (2006), ‘Reforming Representation: The Diffusion of Candidate Gender Quotas Worldwide’, Politics and Gender, 2(3): 303327.Google Scholar
Krook, M.L. (2009), Quotas for Women in Politics: Gender and Candidate Selection Reform Worldwide (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Krook, M.L. and O’Brien, D. (2010), ‘The Politics of Group Representation: Quotas for Women and Minorities Worldwide’, Comparative Politics, 42(3): 253272.Google Scholar
Lawless, J. and Fox, R.L. (2010), It Still Takes a Candidate (New York: Cambridge University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovenduski, J. (1998), ‘Gendering Research in Political Science’, Annual Review of Political Science, 1: 333356.Google Scholar
Lovenduski, J. (2005), Feminizing Politics (Cambridge: Polity Press).Google Scholar
Lovenduski, J. (2016), ‘The Supply and Demand Model of Candidate Selection: Some Reflections’, Government and Opposition, 51(3): 513528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovenduski, J. and Norris, P. (1993) (eds), Gender and Party Politics (London: Sage).Google Scholar
Luhiste, M. (2015), ‘Party Gatekeepers’ Support for Viable Female Candidacy in PR-List Systems’, Politics and Gender, 11(1): 89116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackay, F., Kenny, M. and Chappell, L. (2010), ‘New Institutionalism Through a Gender Lens: Towards a Feminist Institutionalism?’, International Political Science Review, 31(5): 573588.Google Scholar
McAllister, I. and Studlar, D.T. (2002), ‘Electoral Systems and Women’s Representation: A Long-Term Perspective’, Representation, 39(1): 314.Google Scholar
Murray, R. (2010), Gender, Quotas and Candidate Selection in France (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).Google Scholar
Niven, D. (1998), ‘Party Elites and Women Candidates: The Shape of Bias’, Women and Politics, 19(2): 5780.Google Scholar
Norris, P. (1997) (ed.), Passages to Power: Legislative Recruitment in Advanced Democracies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Norris, P. and Lovenduski, J. (1995), Political Recruitment: Gender, Race and Class in the British Parliament (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Panebianco, A. (1988), Political Parties: Organization and Power (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Piscopo, J.M. (2016), ‘When Informality Advantages Women: Quota Networks, Electoral Rules and Candidate Selection in Mexico’, Government and Opposition, 51(3): 487512.Google Scholar
Puwar, N. (2004), ‘Thinking About Making a Difference’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 6(1): 6580.Google Scholar
Rahat, G. (2007), ‘Candidate Selection: The Choice before the Choice’, Journal of Democracy, 18(1): 157170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rahat, G. and Hazan, R.Y. (2001), ‘Candidate Selection Methods’, Party Politics, 7(3): 297322.Google Scholar
Ranney, A. (1981), ‘Candidate Selection’, in D. Butler, H. Penniman and A. Ranney (eds), Democracy at the Polls (Washington: American Enterprise Institute): 75106.Google Scholar
Reynolds, A. (1999), ‘Women in the Legislatures and Executives of the World: Knocking at the Highest Glass Ceiling’, World Politics, 51(4): 547572.Google Scholar
Ryan, M., Haslam, K., Alexander, S. and Kulich, C. (2010), ‘Politics and the Glass Cliff: Evidence that Women are Preferentially Selected to Contest Hard-to-Win Seats’, Psychology of Women Quarterly, 34: 5664.Google Scholar
Scott, J.W. (1986), ‘Gender: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis’, American Historical Review, 91(5): 10531075.Google Scholar
Seyd, P. (1999), ‘New Parties/New Politics? A Case Study of the British Labour Party’, Party Politics, 5(3): 383405.Google Scholar
Swenden, W. and Maddens, B. (2009) (eds), Territorial Party Politics in Western Europe (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).Google Scholar
Threlfall, M. (2007), ‘Explaining Gender Parity Representation in Spain: The Internal Dynamics of Parties’, West European Politics, 30(5): 10681095.Google Scholar
Tremblay, M. and Pelletier, R. (2001), ‘More Women Constituency Party Presidents: A Strategy for Increasing the Number of Women Candidates in Canada?’, Party Politics, 7(2): 157190.Google Scholar
Tripp, A.M. and Kang, A. (2008), ‘The Global Impact of Quotas: On the Fast Track to Increased Female Legislative Representation’, Comparative Political Studies, 41(3): 338361.Google Scholar
United Nations (1995), The United Nations and the Advancement of Women, 1945–1995 (New York: United Nations Department of Public Information).Google Scholar
Verge, T. (2013), ‘Regulating Gender Equality in Political Office in Southern Europe: The Cases of Greece, Portugal and Spain’, Representation – Journal of Representative Democracy, 49(4): 439452.Google Scholar
Verge, T. (2015), ‘The Gender Regime of Political Parties: Feedback Effects between Supply and Demand’, Politics and Gender, 11(4): 754759.Google Scholar
Verge, T. and Espírito-Santo, A. (2016), ‘Interactions between Party and Legislative Quotas: Candidate Selection and Quota Compliance in Portugal and Spain’, Government and Opposition, 51(3).Google Scholar
Verge, T., Espírito-Santo, A. and de la Fuente, M. (2014), ‘Playing with Different Cards: Party Politics, Gender Quotas and Women’s Empowerment’, International Political Science Review, 35(1): 6779.Google Scholar
Vickers, J. (2013), ‘Is Federalism Gendered? Incorporating Gender into Studies of Federalism’, Publius: The Journal of Federalism, 43(1): 123.Google Scholar
Webb, P., Farrell, D. and Holliday, I. (2002) (eds), Political Parties in Advanced Industrial Democracies (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Young, L. (2000), Feminists and Party Politics (Vancouver: UBC Press).Google Scholar
Young, L. and Cross, W. (2002), ‘The Rise of Plebiscitary Democracy in Canadian Political Parties’, Party Politics, 8(6): 673699.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 How Gender Makes Parties and Parties Make Gender