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Women don't run? Study on gender gap in political candidates

Date:
December 12, 2014
Source:
University of Pittsburgh
Summary:
An interest in the gender gap between the representations of female candidates in US elections compared to their male counterparts led two University of Pittsburgh professors to take the issue into the laboratory for three years of research.
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An interest in the gender gap between the representations of female candidates in U.S. elections compared to their male counterparts led two University of Pittsburgh professors to take the issue into the laboratory for three years of research.

Associate Professors of Political Science Kristin Kanthak and Jonathan Woon have published an article about the first phase of their research findings. "Women Don't Run? Election Aversion and Candidate Entry" was published online Dec. 2 in the American Journal of Political Science.

"Past research has shown that women seem to be under confident in their ability to hold office," Woon said. "We tried to examine scientifically what the factors were in the decision-making process."

Kanthak and Woon enlisted 350 undergraduate Pitt students to participate in the laboratory experiments, which Kanthak said appeared to show women are more "election averse" than men.

Their research was conducted in three phases in the Pittsburgh Experimental Economics Lab in Posvar Hall, an interdisciplinary research center funded by the National Science Foundation and the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences. In the first phase, men and women were divided into random groups and given a task of adding up numbers. Participants solved as many addition problems as they wanted in a limited time and were paid for correct answers.

In the second phase, participants were asked if they were willing to represent the group. One volunteer was randomly selected, and everyone repeated the addition task. That time, participants earned 2/3 of their money through the addition problems answered correctly by their group leader and 1/3 through their own correctly answered questions. In that scenario, Kanthak and Woon said, men and women each volunteered to lead the group equally--about 80 percent of the time.

In the final phase of the experiment, the participants were asked to declare whether they wanted to be elected as the leader. In that case, they were told to run a short campaign and give a message to the group. Kanthak and Woon found that when a competitive election process was introduced, 78 percent of men chose to run, but only 60 percent of women did.

Women will volunteer to lead a group, Kanthak said, but are less likely than men to go through an actual competition or election to do so.

"We wanted to control the incentives potential candidates face and place men and women with similar qualifications, ambitions, and political environments alongside one another and see if they still made the same decisions to put themselves out there as a candidate. We wanted to level the playing field, and we were able to do that by taking our questions into a lab environment," Kanthak said.

"We also found that election aversion persists with variations in the electoral environment, disappearing only when campaigns are both costless and completely truthful."


Story Source:

Materials provided by University of Pittsburgh. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kristin Kanthak, Jonathan Woon. Women Don't Run? Election Aversion and Candidate Entry. American Journal of Political Science, 2014; DOI: 10.1111/ajps.12158

Cite This Page:

University of Pittsburgh. "Women don't run? Study on gender gap in political candidates." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 12 December 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141212111653.htm>.
University of Pittsburgh. (2014, December 12). Women don't run? Study on gender gap in political candidates. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 23, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141212111653.htm
University of Pittsburgh. "Women don't run? Study on gender gap in political candidates." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141212111653.htm (accessed December 23, 2024).

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