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It Doesn't Matter: Some Cautionary Findings About Sex and Representation From School Committee Conversations
Authors:Jesse Donahue
Institution:Jesse Donahue;is an assistant professor of political science at Saginaw Valley State University. She has authored and co-authored other articles on gender and politics, and currently is working on a comparative study of women political elites at the state and local level.
Abstract:One of the most important findings in the field of gender and politics is that women elected officials at the state and national levels do a better job than men of representing the interests of women, children, and families. This paper uses school committees to ask the same question about women elected officials at the local level. Thus the question that guides this paper is: Does it matter for women if women are elected to this local political institution? If it does matter, then we should “hear” women's distinct ways of participating through their discussions at committee meetings. The study finds, in contrast, that in this political institution women and men behave in remarkably similar ways when separated by committee roles, and that women elected officials in this political institution spend very little time addressing issues affecting girls in public education.
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