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Building: A - Faculty of Law, Floor: 2, Room: 220
Tuesday 10:45 - 12:30 CEST (05/09/2023)
This panel discusses how intersectionality is discussed and related to within politics, and how it in turn influences policy outcomes. It analyzes independence campaigns and gendered targeting of voters through looking at the case of Scotland, feminist foreign policy in a post-colonial framework, the impact of gender on the incumbency advantage, gendered candidate selection in Lebanon and the connection (or the lack thereof) between queer political officials and queering policies.
Title | Details |
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Sex, Gender, Intersections, and Independence: How opposing independence campaigns targeted gendered subgroups of voters in the Scottish Independence Referendum of 2014 | View Paper Details |
Gendered candidate selection in sectarian countries: the Case of Lebanon | View Paper Details |
The incumbency advantage: another male-dominated phenomenon? | View Paper Details |
Electing queers in politics does not queer politics: Reflections on the representational role of out LGBQ legislators in Canada | View Paper Details |