Vying for a man seat: Gender quotas and sustainable representation in Africa

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Abstract

This article explores the impact of gender quotas on sustainable representation in Africa. Sustainable representation is broadly defined as viable and substantial political representation secured for the long run. The research draws on evidence from cross-national election data and two case studies, Uganda and Kenya, which demonstrate that women rarely exceed the minimum thresholds set by gender quotas. This suggests that these quotas may have a ceiling effect on women's representation. For gender quotas to generate long-term representational outcomes, they must be designed to account for other characteristics of the electoral context that affect women's participation outside the quota mandate.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Edgell, A. B. (2018). Vying for a man seat: Gender quotas and sustainable representation in Africa. African Studies Review, 61(1), 185–214. https://doi.org/10.1017/asr.2017.136

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