Marginalization and Mobilization: The Roots of Female Legislators’ Collaborative Advantage in the States

IF 1.7 2区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Clint S. Swift, Kathryn A. VanderMolen
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Abstract Scholars have argued that female legislators are more prone to collaborate than their male counterparts. Though collaboration may be more or less evident in particular situations, we seek to more clearly establish the mechanism behind women’s collaborative activity using the framework of marginalization. In this paper, we use cosponsorship data from 74 state legislative chambers from 2011–2014 to analyze collaborative patterns and mobilizing institutions. We find female legislators are more collaborative than men, and that their collaborative advantage strengthens in chambers where women are systematically excluded from leadership positions. The advantage also extends to bipartisan collaboration, but only in less polarized settings with women’s caucuses. Furthermore, our findings imply that as women are integrated into leadership collaboration will actually decline, especially within their own party. We believe these results are important for understanding both the roots of collaborative behavior among female legislators and consequences of chambers that marginalize women from leadership positions.
边缘化与动员:女性立法者在美国合作优势的根源
摘要学者们认为,女性立法者比男性立法者更容易合作。尽管合作在特定情况下可能或多或少很明显,但我们试图利用边缘化的框架,更明确地建立妇女合作活动背后的机制。在本文中,我们使用2011-2014年74个州立法院的共同赞助数据来分析合作模式和动员机构。我们发现,女性立法者比男性更具协作性,在女性被系统地排除在领导职位之外的议院中,她们的协作优势得到了加强。这种优势也延伸到两党合作,但仅限于与女性核心小组的两极分化程度较低的情况。此外,我们的研究结果表明,随着女性融入领导层,合作实际上会减少,尤其是在她们自己的党内。我们认为,这些结果对于理解女性立法者之间合作行为的根源以及将女性从领导职位边缘化的商会的后果都很重要。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: State Politics & Policy Quarterly (SPPQ) features studies that develop general hypotheses of political behavior and policymaking and test these hypotheses using the unique methodological advantages of the states. It also includes field review essays and a section entitled “The Practical Researcher,” which is a service-oriented feature designed to provide a data, methodological, and assessment resource for those conducting research on state politics. SPPQ is the official journal of the State Politics and Policy section of the American Political Science Association and is published by the University of Illinois Press for the Institute of Legislative Studies at the University of Illinois at Springfield.
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