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It Still Takes a Candidate: Why Women Don't Run for Office

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It Still Takes A Candidate serves as the only systematic, nationwide empirical account of the manner in which gender affects political ambition. Based on data from the Citizen Political Ambition Panel Study, a national survey conducted of almost 3,800 potential candidates in 2001 and a second survey of more than 2,000 of these same individuals in 2008, Jennifer L. Lawless and Richard L. Fox find that women, even in the highest tiers of professional accomplishment, are substantially less likely than men to demonstrate ambition to seek elective office. Women are less likely than men to be recruited to run for office. They are less likely than men to think they are qualified to run for office. And they are less likely than men to express a willingness to run for office in the future. This gender gap in political ambition persists across generations and over time. Despite cultural evolution and society s changing attitudes toward women in politics, running for public office remains a much less attractive and feasible endeavor for women than men.

256 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 29, 2001

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Jennifer L. Lawless

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Amber Lee.
36 reviews2 followers
September 22, 2022
I sometimes worry that I wouldn’t be such a feminist if I had bigger tits.
Profile Image for Annie Jarman.
386 reviews
August 16, 2024
Main points:
- It is misleading to look at gender parity in the electoral candidate pool without considering whether well-positioned women and men are equally interested and willing to run for office.
- Objectively speaking women in this sample of the candidate eligibility pool are just as qualified as men to hold elective positions, yet they are twice as likely as men to believe they are not qualified, and half as likely to think they would win (see page 116 - 117)
- Women have higher expectations for what it means to be qualified, a lot of men think of qualification as just being the desire to serve and to be tough. Women think they need to do all the learning before they try to get there - list impossible requirements like knowing everything about public policy.
- The gender gap in self-perceived qualifications serves as the most potent explanation we uncover for the gender gaps in political ambition.
Profile Image for Kim.
31 reviews6 followers
January 11, 2012
Excellent book and study. Looks at women in a position to run for office (based on past history of officeholders) and determines the reasons they are less likely to run than their male counterparts.

Lawless is doing a new book that will be released soon and I'm interested to see how that will add to this one.

Questions this book left me with:
1. What about the women who never made it to the stage of being optimal candidates and, thus, never made it to the survey pool?
2. How can you recall influences in hindsight so accurately?
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