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In person icon Building: Gamla torget, Floor: 2, Room: Brusewitz
Saturday 16:00 - 17:45 CEST (13/06/2015)
Research on gender and politics has long supported the idea that (radical) right parties are ‘men’s parties’. These parties have traditionally fewer women than men among their members, leaders and representatives, they are less likely to endorse gender equality policies, and they have weaker ties with women’s groups. But recent developments also challenge the traditional depiction of the ‘women-unfriendly’ (radical) right. The political presence and power of right-wing women has increased. At least some (radical) right parties integrate gender issues in discourse and policymaking. These parties sometimes voice traditional views on gender relations; at other times, they support gender equality, leading to ideologically diverse representative claims. This panel further investigates how gender shapes the discourses and practices of (radical) right parties and what the implications are for political representation and policymaking. Under what conditions do women gain access and power in traditional men’s parties? Are women and men symbolically and substantively represented? When do parties support gender equality and when do they oppose it?
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Taking the Folkhem Back: Welfare Chauvinism in Sweden from an Intersectional Perspective | View Paper Details |
Anti-immigration Politics and Migrant Care Labour in the Northern League (Italy) | View Paper Details |
Gendering the P in PRR. Explaining the Persistent Sex Gap in Voting Populist Radical Right | View Paper Details |
Women and the Right: Gender Representation in the Executive in South-Eastern Europe | View Paper Details |
Female Charismatic Leaders for ‘Männerparteien’? A Comparative Case Study of Populist Right-wing Party Leaders Pia Kjærsgaard, Marine Le Pen and Siv Jensen | View Paper Details |