Women, Men, and Elections sheds new light on gendered political behaviour by analysing the relationship between policy supply and gender gaps in vote choice across elections in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and multiple Western European countries.
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"Rosalind Shorrocks has written the book on gender and voting behaviour that should transform the field and accelerate our understanding of when gender gaps in voting appear, and crucially disappear. She has brought the politics back into analyses of gendered political behaviour and shown the critical role parties play in recruiting or repelling women's votes crossnationally. Shorrocks foregrounds intersectionality and context and yet executes her comparative analysis parsimoniously. In my view her approach should be the model adopted by scholars of the gender gap across the globe."
Rosie Campbell, Director of the Global Institute for Women's Leadership and Professor of Politics, King's College London
"A book long overdue to be written: Shorrocks' book offers a compelling integration of the party competition and gender voting behavior literature. It shows convincingly how the positions parties take on issues help us explain the dynamics of the gender gap over time and across countries. A must-read for everybody interested in gender & voting as well as in party competition!"
Nathalie Giger, Associate Professor, Department for Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva
"A must-read for gender & politics scholars and practitioners alike. Shorrocks not only demonstrates the immense power women have at the ballot box, but also convincingly documents how parties' position on selected issues - rather than ideology alone - shape women's and men's choices at the polls."
Mona Morgan-Collins, Assistant Professor in Quantitative Comparative Politics, Durham University
"Shorrocks' book offers an important and comprehensive study that brings nuance to what gender scholars generally describe as the modern gender gap. It moves beyond the traditional left-right dimension and investigates how parties' positions on a wide variety of policy issues are linked to gender and party choice. In addition, it highlights the diversity in voting behaviour among female (and among male) voters, as such calling scholars - rightly - to move away from a basic gender gap and recognize the diversity among female (and male) voters. Covering an analysis of 70 elections, spread across 20 established democracies and 21 years, the book offers a broad comparative perspective and is thus highly valuable not only for gender scholars, but also for scholars in comparative and party politics."
Hilde Coffe, Professor of Politics, Bath University
Rosie Campbell, Director of the Global Institute for Women's Leadership and Professor of Politics, King's College London
"A book long overdue to be written: Shorrocks' book offers a compelling integration of the party competition and gender voting behavior literature. It shows convincingly how the positions parties take on issues help us explain the dynamics of the gender gap over time and across countries. A must-read for everybody interested in gender & voting as well as in party competition!"
Nathalie Giger, Associate Professor, Department for Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva
"A must-read for gender & politics scholars and practitioners alike. Shorrocks not only demonstrates the immense power women have at the ballot box, but also convincingly documents how parties' position on selected issues - rather than ideology alone - shape women's and men's choices at the polls."
Mona Morgan-Collins, Assistant Professor in Quantitative Comparative Politics, Durham University
"Shorrocks' book offers an important and comprehensive study that brings nuance to what gender scholars generally describe as the modern gender gap. It moves beyond the traditional left-right dimension and investigates how parties' positions on a wide variety of policy issues are linked to gender and party choice. In addition, it highlights the diversity in voting behaviour among female (and among male) voters, as such calling scholars - rightly - to move away from a basic gender gap and recognize the diversity among female (and male) voters. Covering an analysis of 70 elections, spread across 20 established democracies and 21 years, the book offers a broad comparative perspective and is thus highly valuable not only for gender scholars, but also for scholars in comparative and party politics."
Hilde Coffe, Professor of Politics, Bath University