Widows, Congressional Representation, and the (Ms.)Appropriation of a Name

Danielle L. Lupton, Sahar Parsa, Steven Sprick Schuster
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Abstract

For much of the 20th century, widowhood was the primary path for women into the U.S. Congress. However, little is understood on how widows’ gender, familial connections and name recognition widows acquire from their husbands may affect their political behavior. Drawing on insights from the literatures across American politics, comparative politics, and economics, we argue that widows in Congress will have an inherent name brand advantage, providing them more freedom to pursue their own policy agendas. Using a differences-in-differences analysis of legislative voting behavior from the 63rd to 104th Congresses, we provide evidence that widows are more liberal than their husbands and follow their own policy agendas. We also show that widows are more liberal than other women. Thus, our results indicate that widowhood embeds both the gender and the dynastic dimension of these legislators. Further evidence suggests that this difference is rooted in the name brand advantage that widows have compared to other women, highlighting the complementarity between these individuals’ dynastic identity and their gender identity.
寡妇、国会代表和(女士)名字的挪用
在20世纪的大部分时间里,守寡是女性进入美国国会的主要途径。然而,人们对寡妇的性别、家庭关系和从丈夫那里获得的知名度如何影响她们的政治行为知之甚少。根据美国政治、比较政治和经济学文献的见解,我们认为国会中的寡妇将具有固有的品牌优势,为她们提供更多的自由来追求自己的政策议程。通过对第63届至第104届国会立法投票行为的差异分析,我们提供了证据,表明寡妇比丈夫更自由,并遵循自己的政策议程。我们还表明,寡妇比其他妇女更自由。因此,我们的研究结果表明,守寡嵌入了这些立法者的性别和王朝维度。进一步的证据表明,这种差异的根源在于寡妇与其他妇女相比拥有的品牌优势,突出了这些人的王朝身份与其性别身份之间的互补性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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