0%

Book Description

Do women participate in and influence meetings equally with men? Does gender shape how a meeting is run and whose voices are heard? The Silent Sex shows how the gender composition and rules of a deliberative body dramatically affect who speaks, how the group interacts, the kinds of issues the group takes up, whose voices prevail, and what the group ultimately decides. It argues that efforts to improve the representation of women will fall short unless they address institutional rules that impede women's voices.

Using groundbreaking experimental research supplemented with analysis of school boards, Christopher Karpowitz and Tali Mendelberg demonstrate how the effects of rules depend on women’s numbers, so that small numbers are not fatal with a consensus process, but consensus is not always beneficial when there are large numbers of women. Men and women enter deliberative settings facing different expectations about their influence and authority. Karpowitz and Mendelberg reveal how the wrong institutional rules can exacerbate women’s deficit of authority while the right rules can close it, and, in the process, establish more cooperative norms of group behavior and more generous policies for the disadvantaged. Rules and numbers have far-reaching implications for the representation of women and their interests.

Bringing clarity and insight to one of today’s most contentious debates, The Silent Sex provides important new findings on ways to bring women’s voices into the conversation on matters of common concern.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication Page
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. List of Tables
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Introduction
  10. Chapter 1: The Problem
  11. Chapter 2: The Sources of the Gender Gap in Political Participation
  12. Chapter 3: Why Women Don’t Speak
  13. Chapter 4: The Deliberative Justice Experiment
  14. Chapter 5: Speech as a Form of Participation: Floor Time and Perceived Influence
  15. Chapter 6: What Makes Women the “Silent Sex” When Their Status Is Low?
  16. Chapter 7: Does Descriptive Representation Facilitate Women’s Distinctive Voice?
  17. Chapter 8: Unpacking the Black Box of Interaction
  18. Chapter 9: When Women Speak, Groups Listen—Sometimes: How and When Women’s Voice Shapes the Group’s Generosity
  19. Chapter 10: Gender Inequality in School Boards
  20. Conclusion
  21. Appendixes
  22. References
  23. Index
3.145.47.118