Gender-Balanced Representation and the Erosion of Global Liberal Norms

Jacob, Suraj and Scherpereel, John A. and Adams, Melinda (2021) Gender-Balanced Representation and the Erosion of Global Liberal Norms. Representation Journal of Representative Democracy. ISSN 1749-4001

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Abstract

behaviour-shaping power of global liberal norms? The paper uses updated dyadic data on ambassadorial appointments to address this question. It focuses on the fate of a global liberal norm on gender-balanced representation. It argues that when powerful international partners discount the importance of gender balance, governments become less likely to prioritise gender balance themselves. The pattern of nodding toward partners’ norms is particularly pronounced for governments of structurally dependent, poorer countries. We find that the gender-balanced representation norm has eroded in the last five years. In this period, countries like Sweden and Germany have increased their support for global liberal norms, but China has become an increasingly vocal opponent. We also find that countries’ international power positions—not their broad cultural value systems (e.g. ‘Asian values’)—affect partner countries’ approaches. We suggest that the pressure for states to prioritize women’s political representation will weaken further unless rising powers dramatically reorient their current behaviours

Item Type: Article
Authors: Jacob, Suraj and Scherpereel, John A. and Adams, Melinda
Document Language:
Language
English
Uncontrolled Keywords: Global norms, gender, women’s political representation, diplomacy, power
Subjects: Social sciences
Social sciences > Sociology & anthropology
Divisions: Azim Premji University > School of Development
Full Text Status: Restricted
URI: http://publications.azimpremjiuniversity.edu.in/id/eprint/3614
Publisher URL: https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformat...

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