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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/176608

The Gender Divide in Issue Attention

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This article explores the conditions under which female members of parliament (MPs) are more likely than male MPs to participate in political debates relating to a range of issues. Building on descriptive representation theory and parliamentary behaviour studies, we examine how the effect of the number of women in parliament, and women's access to leadership positions, on MPs' issue attention varies across policy areas and parliamentary venues. Looking at oral questions asked by male and female MPs in plenary sessions and parliamentary committees in Spain from 1982 to 2018, we found that numbers and leadership positions significantly affect female MPs' attention to those parliamentary activities that aim to highlight the merits of government action and in venues that are less open to public scrutiny. Our results also illustrate that the presence of women in parliament and their access to leadership positions have a significant impact on female MPs' attention to rights‐ and welfare‐related issues, but not issues traditionally linked to high‐profile political areas such as national security, macroeconomic policy, and government affairs. The presence of women in parliaments has increased globally, but inequalities in the gender distribution of issue attention persist, thereby reducing the capacity of female MPs to act on behalf of and stand up for women in political debates on most issues.

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CHAQUÉS BONAFONT, Laura and CRISTANCHO, Camilo. The Gender Divide in Issue Attention. European Journal of Political Research. 2022. Vol. 61, num. 1, pags. 3-20. ISSN 0304-4130. [consulted: 6 of June of 2026]. Available at: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/176608

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