Institutional Change in Constrained Circumstances: Gender, Resistance, and Critical Actors in the Chilean Executive

Author:

Staab SilkeORCID,Waylen GeorginaORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTBecause gender equality actors rarely have sufficient power to create new institutions, this article asks how they can achieve positive gender change in constrained circumstances when the creation of new rules is not possible. Building on a feminist institutionalist approach to analyzing gendered institutional dynamics, power, and resistance, we open the “black box” of one executive: Michelle Bachelet’s first presidency in Chile (2006–10). Using theory-guided process tracing and primarily qualitative data, we examine key reforms in three policy areas—health, pensions, and childcare—that were central to Bachelet’s first program. By analyzing how efforts to incorporate positive gender change fared differently in each area, this study shows how far utilizing, subverting, or converting existing rules—more “hidden” forms of change, often away from legislatures—can be effective, if limited, strategies when gender equality advocates face resistance.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference65 articles.

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