Using a Continuous Measure of Genderedness to Assess Sex Differences in the Attitudes of the Political Elite

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Abstract

We investigated the attitudes of the 11,410 candidates in the Finnish 2017 municipal elections who had responded to a Voting Advice Application. Women candidates were, both in terms of economic and social attitudes, more progressive than men. Building on the gender diagnosticity approach, we used responses to the attitude items to construct a dimensional measure of political genderedness; i.e., a measure of the femininity–masculinity of the individual’s political attitudes. We used this measure to investigate the magnitude of sex differences across parties and the determinants of these differences. Sex differences were larger in parties with more economically right-oriented, socially conservative, well-off, and male candidates. Moreover, these differences were caused by men in these parties being different from other candidates. A similar methodology, in which a continuous measure of genderedness is used to assess sex differences, could be used in other domains of research on political behavior.

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Lönnqvist, J. E., & Ilmarinen, V. J. (2021). Using a Continuous Measure of Genderedness to Assess Sex Differences in the Attitudes of the Political Elite. Political Behavior, 43(4), 1779–1800. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11109-021-09681-2

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