Voting against Women: Political Patriarchy, Islam, and Representation in Indonesia

Sally White, Eve Warburton, Pramashavira, Adrianus Hendrawan, Edward Aspinall
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Abstract

We examine cultural and ideological barriers to gender equality in a young democracy, Indonesia, where women’s political representation has increased slowly since democratization, but where survey results point to declining support for women’s political leadership. In both country and comparative literature, the effect of ideological factors—including religion—on voter support for women candidates is contested. Using results of a nationally representative survey, we group respondents according to a “political patriarchy” index. We find that being a Muslim is a strong predictor of holding patriarchal attitudes; university education is associated with gender-egalitarian views. Patriarchal views, in turn, are associated with opposition to increasing Indonesia’s gender quota and with lower levels of self-reported voting for female candidates. Our findings suggest that patriarchal attitudes drive both policy preferences and voter behavior. We conclude that Indonesia’s recent conservative Islamic turn likely underpins widespread—and increasing—opposition to gender equality in politics.
投票反对妇女:印度尼西亚的父权政治、伊斯兰教和代表权
在印度尼西亚这个年轻的民主国家,女性的政治代表权自民主化以来增长缓慢,但调查结果显示对女性政治领导的支持率却在下降。在国家文献和比较文献中,意识形态因素(包括宗教)对女性候选人选民支持率的影响存在争议。利用一项具有全国代表性的调查结果,我们根据 "政治父权制 "指数对受访者进行了分组。我们发现,身为穆斯林是持有重男轻女态度的有力预测因素;大学教育与性别平等观点相关。父权制观点反过来又与反对增加印尼的性别配额以及自我报告的女性候选人投票率较低有关。我们的研究结果表明,重男轻女的态度推动了政策偏好和选民行为。我们的结论是,印尼近来的伊斯兰保守主义转向很可能是反对政治中性别平等的普遍现象--而且这种现象还在不断增加--的基础。
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