Women in Politics

Abiuava, G. J. (2016). Presence and Purpose in the Canadian House of Commons: The Standing Committee on the Status of Women? Parliamentary Affairs, 69, 830-844.

Adams, J., Bracken, D., Gidron, N., Horne, W., O’Brien, D. Z., & Senk, K. (2022). Can’t We All Just Get Along? How Women MPs Can Ameliorate Affective Polarization in Western Publics. American Political Science Review, 1-7.

Adofo, N. F. (2021). An assessment of gendered mediation in daily graphic newspapers: the case of the 2020 general elections in Ghana [Unpublished master’s thesis]. Memorial University of Newfoundland.

Ahmad, R., Khan, B. Y., & Hadi, W. M. E. (2020). Thematic Analysis of the Editorials of Pakistani Print Media during the General Election, 2018. Global Mass Communication Review, 3, 187-201.

Alexander, A. C., Bolzendahl, C., & Jalalzai, F. (Eds.). (2017). Measuring women’s political empowerment across the globe: Strategies, challenges and future research. Springer.

Alexander, A. C. (2012). Change in women's descriptive representation and the belief in women's ability to govern: A virtuous cycle. Politics & Gender, 8(4), 437-464.

Alexander, A. C. (2015). Big Jumps in Women's Presence in Parliaments: Are These Sufficient for Improving Beliefs in Women's Ability to Govern?. Advancing Women in Leadership Journal, 35.

Alexandre‐Collier, A., & Drolet, M. (2022). Women and the Politics of Incivility and Discrimination: Introduction. The Political Quarterly, 93(1), 8-16.

Alkenäs, P. (2022). 'Men in Grey Suits': Androcentric Language in the House of Commons: A Corpus-Assisted Feminist Critical Discourse Analysis. [Unpublished master’s thesis]. Linnæus University.

Allsop, C. (2015). Policy Commissions and Representation of Aboriginal Women Issues: A Case-Study of the New Democratic Party of Canada and the Liberal Party of Canada (1590697). [Master’s thesis, University of Windsor]. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.

Allwood, G., & Wadia, K. (2002). Women and politics in France 1958-2000. Routledge. [FR]

Álvarez Monsiváis, E. (2021). Race-gender intersectionality in Mexican digital news on Kamala Harris. Convergencia Revista de Ciencias Sociales, 28, 1-26.

Amin, R. U., Gill, A., & Alam, M. F. (2020). Gender Stereotyping: Hina Rabbani Khar–The First Pakistani Woman Foreign Minister’s framed Media Portrayals. Academic Journal of Social Sciences (AJSS), 4(4), 918-938.

Andrew, C., Biles, J., Siemiatycki, M., & Tolley, E. (Eds.). (2009). Electing a diverse Canada: The representation of immigrants, minorities, and women. UBC Press.

Archer, E. G. (2019). “Quota [ed]”: The impact of gender quota on the visibility of female politicians in the media [Unpublished master's thesis]. Masaryk University and Utrecht University.

Armes, C. M. (2019). Who They Are and Where They Ran: An Examination of the Interplay between Gender and Conservative Descriptive Representation in the 2018 Ontario and 2019 Alberta General Elections [Unpublished master’s thesis]. Queen’s University.

Ashe, J. (2019). Political Candidate Selection: Who Wins, Who Loses, and Under-Representation in the UK. Routledge.

Ashe, Jeanette. (2017). Women's Legislative Underrepresentation: Enough Come Forward, (Still) Too Few Chosen. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 50(2), 597-613.

Auer, M., Trimble, L., Curtin, J., Wagner, A., & Woodman, V. K. G. (2020). Invoking the idealized family to assess political leadership and legitimacy: news coverage of Australian and Canadian premiers. Feminist Media Studies, 1-16.

Badas, A., & Stauffer, K. E. (2019). Voting for women in nonpartisan and partisan elections. Electoral Studies, 57, 245-255.

Baker, C. N., & Rodrigues-Sherley, M. (2022). Women and Political Systems Worldwide. Women Worldwide.

Baldez, L. (2010). The Gender Lacuna in Comparative Politics. Perspectives on Politics, 8(1), 199-205.

Banducci, S., Everitt, J., & Gidengil, E. L. (2003, July). Gender stereotypes of political candidates: A meta-analysis. Annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Berlin, Germany.

Banwart, M. C. (2010). Gender and candidate communication: Effects of stereotypes in the 2008 election. American Behavioral Scientist, 54(3), 265-283.

Bardall, G., Bjarnegård, E., & Piscopo, J. M. (2020). How is political violence gendered? Disentangling motives, forms, and impacts. Political Studies, 68(4), 916-935.

Bardall, G., Murombo, G., Hussain, T., et al. (2018). Violence against Women in Elections in Zimbabwe. International Foundation of Electoral Systems.

Bardall, G. (2011). Breaking the Mold: Understanding Gender and Electoral Violence. International Foundation of Electoral Systems.

Bardall, G. (2013). Gender Specific Election Violence: the Role of Information and Communication Technologies. Stability: International Journal of Security and Development, 2(3), 60-71.

Bardall, G. (2016). Voices, Votes and Violence: Essays on Selected Dynamics of Electoral Authoritarianism [Unpublished doctoral dissertation].  Université de Montréal.

Barnes, A. & Munn-Rivard, L. (2013). Gender-Sensitive Parliaments I: Advancements in the Workplace.Library of Parliament.

Bashevkin, S. (2009). Party Talk: Assessing the Feminist Rhetoric of Women Leadership Candidates in Canada. Canadian Journal of Political Science / Revue Canadienne de Science Politique, 42(2), 345-362.

Bashevkin, S. (Ed.). (2010). Opening doors wider: women's political engagement in Canada. UBC Press.

Baskaran, T., & Hessami, Z. (2022). The gender recontest gap in elections. European Economic Review, 145.

Bauer, N. M., & Taylor, T. (2022). Selling them Short? Differences in News Coverage of Female and Male Candidate Qualifications. Political Research Quarterly.

Bauer, N. M. (2022). Who Covers the Qualifications of Female Candidates? Examining Gender Bias in News Coverage Across National and Local Newspapers. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly.

Beauregard, K. (2021). Sexism and the Australian voter: how sexist attitudes influenced vote choice in the 2019 federal election. Australian Journal of Political Science, 56(3), 298-317.

Beckwith, K. (2010). Introduction: Comparative Politics and the Logics of a Comparative Politics of Gender. Perspectives on Politics, 8(1), 159-168.

Berthet, V., & Kantola, J. (2021). Gender, violence, and political institutions: struggles over sexual harassment in the European Parliament. Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 28(1), 143-167. [EU]

Berthet, V. (2022). Mobilization Against Sexual Harassment in the European Parliament: The MeTooEP Campaign. European Journal of Women's Studies, 29(2), 331-346.

Besco, R., Gerrits, B., & Matthews, J. S. (2016). White millionaires and hockey skates: Racialized and gendered mediation in news coverage of a Canadian mayoral election. International Journal of Communication, 10.

Bird, K., Jackson, S. D., McGregor, R. M., Moore, A. A., & Stephenson, L. B. (2016). Sex (and ethnicity) in the city: Affinity voting in the 2014 Toronto mayoral election. Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique, 49(2), 359-383.

Bird, K. (2003). The political representation of women and ethnic minorities in established democracies: A framework for comparative research. AMID Working Paper Series.

Bird, K. (2003). Who are the women? Where are the women? And what difference can they make? Effects of gender parity in French municipal elections. French Politics, 1(1), 5-38.

Bird, K. (2005). Female political profession: Sex and power under the Fifth Republic. Chicago Press.

Bird, K. (2005). Gendering parliamentary questions. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 7(3), 353-370.

Bird, K. (2014, May). Challenges to Inclusion: The Structure and Impact of Electoral Quotas on Ethnic Minority Women. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON.

Bird, K. (2016). Intersections of exclusion: the institutional dynamics of combined gender and ethnic quota systems. Politics, Groups, and Identities, 4(2), 284-306.

Bird, K. (2018). The effects of gender parity in elections: the French case. In Gaffney, J. (Ed.), The French Presidential and Legislative Elections of 2002 (pp. 238-259). Routledge.

Biroli, F. (2016). Political Violence against Women in Brazil: Expressions and Definitions. Direito & Práxis, 7(15), 557-589.

Bisbee, J., Fraccaroli, N., & Kern, A. (2022). Yellin'at Yellen: Gender Bias in the Federal Reserve Congressional Hearings. SSRN.[US]

Bjarnegård, E., Håkansson, S., & Zetterberg, P. (2022). Gender and violence against political candidates: Lessons from Sri Lanka. Politics & Gender, 18(1), 33-61. [LK]

Bjarnegård, E. (2018). Making Gender Visible in Election Violence: Strategies for Data Collection. Politics & Gender, 14(4), 690-695.

Bjarnegård, E. (2021). The continuum of election violence: Gendered candidate experiences in the Maldives. International Political Science Review. [MV]

Blomén, V. (2017). Representing group interests: A study on the substantive representation of women and minority groups in the Jordanian House of Representatives (10778948). [Master’s thesis, Uppsala University]. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.

Bouchard, J. (2020). Politics and Prejudice: the influence of ethnicity-based, gender-based, and age-based stereotypes on political behaviour [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. University of Laval.

Brands, C., Kruikemeier, S., & Trilling, D. (2021). Insta(nt) famous? Visual self-presentation and the use of masculine and feminine issues by female politicians on Instagram. Information, Communication & Society, 24(14), 2016-2036.

Broockman, D. E. (2014). Do female politicians empower women to vote or run for office? A regression discontinuity approach. Electoral Studies, 34, 190-204.

Brooks, D. J. (2013). He Runs, She Runs. Princeton University Press.

Bruce, W. M. (1995). Feminist Ethics in City Government: Radical or Routine? Public Productivity & Management Review, 19(2), 160-171.

Buckley, F., & Mariani, M. (2021). Money Matters: The impact of gender quotas on campaign spending for women candidates. International Political Science Review.

Burllington, J., Bardall, G., & Borovsky, G. (2017) Preventing Violence Against Women in Elections: A Programming Guide. Report for UN Women.

Calasanti, A., & Gerrits, B. (2021). “You’re not my nanny!” Responses to racialized women leaders during COVID-19. Politics, Groups, and Identities, 1-18.

Carlsson, K. (2020). Approach, Adjust or Avoid?: A descriptive case study on how women human rights defenders in Colombia cope with political violence. [CO]

Carroll, S. J., & Sanbonmatsu, K. (2013). More women can run: Gender and pathways to the state legislatures. Oxford University Press.

Carroll, S. J., Cassese, E., Clark, C., Clark, J. M., Conway, M. M., Dolan, K. A., ... & Omero, M. (2008). Voting the Gender Gap. University of Illinois Press.

Cassese, E., Conroy, M., Mehta, D., & Nestor, F. (2022). Media Coverage of Female Candidates’ Traits in the 2020 Democratic Presidential Primary. Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, 43(1), 42-63. [US]

Chaney, E. M. (2014). Supermadre: women in politics in Latin America (Vol. 50). University of Texas Press.

Childs, S., & Krook, M. L. (2006). Gender and politics: The state of the art. Politics, 26(1), 18-28.

Childs, S. (2017). Diversity Sensitive Parliaments: Parliamentary Practice in Comparison, a Briefing. University of Bristol.

Čičkarić, L. (2019). Violence Against Women in Politics. Institute of Social Sciences, Contemporary issues and perspectives on gender research.

Clayton, A. (2015). Women’s political engagement under quota-mandated female representation: Evidence from a randomized policy experiment. Comparative Political Studies, 48(3), 333-369.

Cloutier, M. N. (2019). Women in the Office: MP Staff in Canada [Unpublished master’s thesis]. University of Calgary.

Coffé, H., & Reiser, M. (2018). Political candidates’ attitudes towards group representation. The Journal of Legislative Studies, 24(3), 272-297.

Collier, C., & Raney, T. (2018). Canada's Member-to-Member Code of Conduct on Sexual Harassment in the House of Commons: Progress or Regress? Canadian Journal of Political Science, 51(4), 795-815.

Collier, C. N., & Raney, T. (2018). Canada's member-to-member code of conduct on sexual harassment in the House of Commons: Progress or regress?. Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique, 51(4), 795-815.

Collier, C. N., & Raney, T. (2018). Understanding Sexism and Sexual Harassment in Politics: A Comparison of Westminster Parliaments in Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 25(3), 432-455.

Collier, C. N., Raney, T. (2018). Understanding Sexism and Sexual Harassment in Politics: A Comparison of Westminster Parliaments in Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 25(3), 432-455.

Collignon, S., & Rüdig, W. (2021). Increasing the cost of female representation? The gendered effects of harassment, abuse and intimidation towards Parliamentary candidates in the UK. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, 31(4), 429-449.  [UK]

Conley, B. M., & Cobb, R. V. (2021). Gender and the 2020 Democratic Primary: An Analysis of the Warren/Sanders Battle for the Leftwing of the Democratic Party. In The 2020 Democratic Primary (pp. 107-121). Palgrave Macmillan. [US]

Cox, D. L. (2022). A Woman's Place is in the House: Reclaiming Civility, Tolerance and Respect in Political Life. The Political Quarterly, 93(1), 17-24.

Cretney, C. (2013). Support for a female president: Voter perceptions of liberal and conservative female presidential candidates in the context of gendered media framing. California State University.

Croskill, J. L. (2020). “Be Professional, Private and Pleasant”: The Conscious and Unconscious Gendering of Campaign Messages in Canadian and Australian Local Elections [Unpublished doctoral thesis]. University of Calgary.

Crowder-Meyer, M. (2013). Gendered recruitment without trying: how local party recruiters affect women's representation. Politics & Gender, 9(4), 390-413.

Cuthbertson, L., Kearney, A., Dawson, R., Zawaduk, A., Cuthbertson, E., Gordon-Tighe, A., & Mathewson, K. W. (2019). Women, politics and Twitter: Using machine learning to change the discourse. AI for Social Good workshop at NeurIPS.

Dalton, E. (2019). A feminist critical discourse analysis of sexual harassment in the Japanese political and media worlds. Women's Studies International Forum, 77. [JP]

Dalton, E. (2021). Sexual Harassment in Japanese Politics. Palgrave Macmillan. [JP]

Darcy, R., & Hadley, C. D. (1988). Black women in politics: The puzzle of success. Social Science Quarterly, 69(3).

De Geus, R., McAndrews, J. R., Loewen, P. J., & Martin, A. (2020). Credit, blame and leadership stereotypes: are retrospective judgments affected by gender stereotypes? experimental evidence from the United States and Australia. Political Research Quarterly, 74(2).

de Geus, R., Tolley, E., Goodyear-Grant, E., & Loewen, P. J. (Eds.). (2021). Women, Power, and Political Representation: Canadian and Comparative Perspectives. University of Toronto Press.

de Geus, R. A., McAndrews, J. R., Loewen, P. J., & Martin, A. (2021). Do voters judge the performance of female and male politicians differently? Experimental evidence from the United States and Australia. Political Research Quarterly, 74(2), 302-316. [Comparative] [US] [AU]

DeHart‐Davis, L., Marlowe, J., & Pandey, S. K. (2006). Gender dimensions of public service motivation. Public administration review, 66(6), 873-887.

Dikwal-Bot, D., & Mendes, K. (2022). “Eight Tory Leadership candidates declare themselves feminists”: feminism and political campaigns. Feminist Media Studies, 1-17.

Ditonto, T. M., Hamilton, A. J., & Redlawsk, D. P. (2014). Gender stereotypes, information search, and voting behavior in political campaigns. Political Behavior, 36(2), 335-358.

Dittmar, K., Sanbonmatsu, K., & Carroll, S. J. (2018). A seat at the table: Congresswomen's perspectives on why their presence matters. Oxford University Press.

Doan, A. E., & Haider-Markel, D. P. (2010). The role of intersectional stereotypes on evaluations of gay and lesbian political candidates. Politics & Gender, 6(1), 63-91.

Dolan, J., Deckman, M. M., & Swers, M. L. (2021). Women and politics: Paths to power and political influence. Rowman & Littlefield.

Dolan, K., & Ford, L. E. (1995). Women in the state legislatures: Feminist identity and legislative behaviors. American Politics Quarterly, 23(1), 96-108.

Dolan, K., & Ford, L. E. (1997). Change and continuity among women state legislators: Evidence from three decades. Political Research Quarterly, 50(1), 137-151.

Dolan, K., & Hansen, M. (2018). Blaming women or blaming the system? Public perceptions of women’s underrepresentation in elected office. Political Research Quarterly, 71(3), 668-680.

Dolan, K., & Lynch, T. (2014). It takes a survey: Understanding gender stereotypes, abstract attitudes, and voting for women candidates. American Politics Research, 42(4), 656-676.

Dolan, K., & Lynch, T. (2015). Making the connection? Attitudes about women in politics and voting for women candidates. Politics, Groups, and Identities, 3(1), 111-132.

Dolan, K., & Lynch, T. (2016). The impact of gender stereotypes on voting for women candidates by level and type of office. Politics & Gender, 12(3), 573-595.

Dolan, K., & Lynch, T. (2017). Do candidates run as women and men or democrats and republicans? The impact of party and sex on issue campaigns. Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, 38(4), 522-546.

Dolan, K., & Sanbonmatsu, K. (2009). Gender stereotypes and attitudes toward gender balance in government. American Politics Research, 37(3), 409-428.

Dolan, K. (1996). Support for women political candidates: An examination of the role of family. Women & Politics, 16(2), 45-60.

Dolan, K. (1997). Gender differences in support for women candidates: Is there a glass ceiling in American politics?. Women & Politics, 17(2), 27-41.

Dolan, K. (1998). Voting for Women in the "Year of the Woman". American Journal of Political Science, 272-293.

Dolan, K. (1998). Year of the Woman't. American Journal of Political Science, 42(1).

Dolan, K. (2004). The impact of candidate sex on evaluations of candidates for the US House of Representatives. Social Science Quarterly, 85(1), 206-217.

Dolan, K. (2005, September). Do Women Candidates Exert An Impact on Voter Turnout?. Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC.

Dolan, K. (2005). Do women candidates play to gender stereotypes? Do men candidates play to women? Candidate sex and issues priorities on campaign websites. Political Research Quarterly, 58(1), 31-44.

Dolan, K. (2005). How the public views women candidates. Women and Elective Office, 41-59.

Dolan, K. (2006, April). Women candidates in American politics: What we know, what we want to know. Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association.

Dolan, K. (2008). Is there a “gender affinity effect” in American politics? Information, affect, and candidate sex in US House elections. Political Research Quarterly, 61(1), 79-89.

Dolan, K. (2008). Running against a woman: Do female opponents shape male candidate behaviors?. Social Science Quarterly, 89(3), 765-779.

Dolan, K. (2008). Women as candidates in American politics: The continuing impact of sex and gender. Political women and American democracy, 110-127.

Dolan, K. (2010). The impact of gender stereotyped evaluations on support for women candidates. Political Behavior, 32(1), 69-88.

Dolan, K. (2011, August). Evaluating Women Candidates: The Impact of Political Gender Stereotypes on Vote Choice in the 2010 Midterm Elections. American Political Science Association Annual Meeting Paper, Seattle, WA.

Dolan, K. (2011). Do women and men know different things? Measuring gender differences in political knowledge. The Journal of Politics, 73(1), 97-107.

Dolan, K. (2012). Electoral context, issues, and voting for women in the 1990s. In Women and Congress (pp. 35-50). Routledge.

Dolan, K. (2013, August/September). Gendered Self Images and Gender Stereotypes: How Candidates Present Themselves to the Public. American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Chicacgo, IL.

Dolan, K. (2014). Gender stereotypes, candidate evaluations, and voting for women candidates: what really matters?. Political Research Quarterly, 67(1), 96-107.

Dolan, K. (2014). There is much less gender bias against women candidates than election-year anecdotes would have us believe. LSE American Politics and Policy.

Dolan, K. A. (2014). When does gender matter?: Women candidates and gender stereotypes in American elections. Oxford University Press.

Dolan, K. A. (2018). Voting for women: How the public evaluates women candidates. Routledge.

Dolan, K. Voting for Women Candidates for Congress: The Role of Gendered Information in the Electoral Environment. Science, 27, 497-523.

Dos Santos, B. M. (2021). The Representation of the Female Politician in Online News Media Outlets: Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and Theresa May (28935556). [Master’s thesis, University of Johannesburg]. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.

DuBosar, E. (2022). Assessing Differences in the Framing of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump During the 2016 Presidential Election. Society, 59(2), 169-180. [US]

Duerst-Lahti, Georgia, and Cathy Marie Johnson. 1990. Gender and Style in Bureaucracy. Women and Politics, 10(4), 67-120.

Dupuis, R. (2019). Conference on Women's Equality and Parity. Senate of Canada.

Duval, D., & Bouchard, J. (2021). Gender, the Media and Parity: The Case of the 2018 Québec Election. Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique, 54(3), 637-654.

D’Heer, J., De Vuyst, S., & Van Leuven, S. (2021). Gendering in the electoral run: A media monitoring study of women politicians’ representation in Belgian news. Journalism.

Elliott, E. (2016). Gender-based Political Harassment: Building Awareness in Parliaments. Report for the International Secretariat of ParlAmericas.

Erikson, J., & Josefsson, C. (2022). The parliament as a gendered workplace: How to research legislators’(UN) equal opportunities to represent. Parliamentary Affairs, 75(1), 20-38.

Erikson, J., & Verge, T. (2022). Gender, power and privilege in the parliamentary workplace. Parliamentary Affairs, 75(1), 1-19.

Erikson, J., Håkansson, S., & Josefsson, C. (2021). Three Dimensions of Gendered Online Abuse: Analyzing Swedish MPs’ Experiences of Social Media. Perspectives on Politics, 1-17. [SE]

Escobar-Lemmon, M. C., & Taylor-Robinson, M. M. (2016). Women in presidential cabinets: Power players or abundant tokens?. Oxford University Press.

Espírito-Santo, A., Verge, T., & Morales, L. (2019). The diversity gap in the Portuguese and Spanish parliaments: descriptive representation through an intersectional perspective. In Fernandes, J. M., & Leston-Bandeira, C. (Eds.), The Iberian Legislatures in Comparative Perspective (pp. 111-129). Routledge.

Esposito, E., & Breeze, R. (2022). Gender and politics in a digitalised world: Investigating online hostility against UK female MPs. Discourse & Society.

Esposito, E., & Zollo, S. A. (2021). “How dare you call her a pig, I know several pigs who would be upset if they knew”: A multimodal critical discursive approach to online misogyny against UK MPs on YouTube. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict, 9(1), 47-75.

Esposito, E. (2021). Introduction: Critical perspectives on gender, politics and violence. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict, 9(1), 1-20.

Everitt, J., & Albaugh, Q. M. (2022). The origins of gender-targeted public finance measures: the case of New Brunswick, Canada. European Journal of Politics and Gender, 5(1), 127-144.

Everitt, J., & Gidengil, E. (2003). Tough talk: How television news covers male and female leaders of Canadian political parties. Women and electoral politics in Canada, 194.

Everitt, J., & Pitre, S. (2007). Electoral reform and issues of representation. Democratic Reform in New Brunswick, 103.

Everitt, J., & Raney, T. (2019). Winning as a woman/Winning as a lesbian: Voter attitudes toward Kathleen Wynne in the 2014 Ontario Election. Queering representation: LGBTQ people and electoral politics in Canada, 80-101.

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Everitt, J. (2003). Media in the Maritimes: Do female candidates face a bias?. Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture & Social Justice, 27(2), 90-98.

Everitt, J. (2005). Gender, media, and politics: A critical review essay. Political Communication, 22(3), 387-396.

Everitt, J. (2006). Gender-role orientations and the conversion of social capital into political engagement. Gender and Social Capital, 273-291.

Everitt, J. (2012, August/September). The Status of Women in Canadian Political Science. American Political Science Association Annual Meeting Paper, New Orleans, LA.

Everitt, J. (2012). Women as Political Communicators: Candidates and Campaigns. In Scammell, M., & Semetko, H. A. (Eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Political Communication. SAGE

Everitt, J. (2015). Gender and sexual diversity in provincial election campaigns. Canadian Political Science Review, 9(1), 177-192.

Everitt, J. (2016). Where are the women in Canadian political parties?. Canadian Parties in Transition, 296-315.

Everitt, J. (2018). Using Electoral Reform Discussions to Enhance Women’s Political Representation: Steps in the Right Direction. Journal of New Brunswick Studies/Revue d’études sur le Nouveau-Brunswick, 9.

Feeney, M. K., & Camarena, L. (2021). Gender, race, and diversity values among local government leaders. Review of public personnel administration, 41(1), 105-131.

Feo, F., Fiorelli, C., & Piccio, D. R. (2021). Gendered patterns in candidates’ campaign fundraising: The case of Italy. International Political Science Review.

Fernández-Rovira, C., & Giraldo-Luque, S. (2021). How Are Women Politicians Treated in the Press? The Case of Spain, France and the United Kingdom. Journalism and Media, 2(4), 732-745.

Fernández-Rovira, C., & Giraldo-Luque, S. (2021). The Tone in Media Coverage of Women Politicians. Comparative Analysis of the Polarity of Journalistic Texts in Spain, France and the United Kingdom. International Conference on Communication and Applied Technologies (pp. 403-413). Springer. [Comparative]

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Ford, L. E. (2018). Women and politics: The pursuit of equality. Routledge.

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Franceschet, S., Annesley, C., & Beckwith, K. (2017). What do women symbolize? Symbolic representation and cabinet appointments. Politics, Groups, and Identities, 5(3), 488-493.

Fridkin, K. L., & Kenney, P. J. (2009). The role of gender stereotypes in US Senate campaigns. Politics & Gender, 5(3), 301-324.

Fridkin, K. L., & Kenney, P. J. (2014). How the gender of US senators influences people’s understanding and engagement in politics. The Journal of Politics, 76(4), 1017-1031.

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