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Full Description
This book addresses the central question of how right-wing women navigate the cross-pressures between gender identity and political ideology.
The hope has always been that more women in politics would lead to greater inclusion of women's voices and interests in decision-making and policy. Yet this is not always the case; some prominent conservative women such as Margaret Thatcher have rejected the feminist label while others such as Angela Merkel have reluctantly accepted it. Republican women in the U.S. Congress have embraced social and economic policies contrary to what many consider to be women's issues while EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen is a staunch supporter of feminist ideas. Other conservative women, such as Marine LePen in France strategically use feminist ideas to justify their conservative stances on immigration. This brings up an interesting yet understudied question: under what circumstances do conservative women become feminist allies and when do they toe the party line? It is this tension between women's political representation and conservatism that this edited volume explores.
The chapters in this book, except for Chapter 3, were originally published as a special issue of Journal of Women, Politics & Policy.
Contents
Introduction: Sell-Outs or Warriors for Change? A Comparative Look at Rightist, Political Women in Democracies 1. Where Do Female Conservatives Stand? A Cross-National Analysis of the Issue Positions and Ideological Placement of Female Right-Wing Candidates 2. Mapping Right-Wing Women's Policy Priorities in Latin America 3. Left, Right, and Center: Women's Political Incorporation in the OECD 4. The Merit of Party Institutions: Women's Descriptive Representation and Conservative Parties in Australia and the United Kingdom 5. Framing Identity Politics: Right-Wing Women as Strategic Party Actors in the UK and US