Representing women, women representing: backbenchers’ questions during Prime Minister’s Questions, 1979–2010
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Published:2019-06-01
Issue:2
Volume:2
Page:237-256
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ISSN:2515-1088
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Container-title:European Journal of Politics and Gender
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language:en
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Short-container-title:European Journal of Politics and Gender
Author:
Bates Stephen Holden1,
Sealey Alison2
Affiliation:
1. University of Birmingham, UK
2. Lancaster University, UK
Abstract
This article investigates linguistic traces of changing trends in the substantive representation of women, as well as broader representational claims related to constituencies, via an analysis of all backbench questions posed during Prime Minister’s Questions in the UK House of
Commons during 1979–2010. We investigate the impact of sharp increases in female MPs, in particular, left-wing female MPs, and the presence of a left-wing government on MPs’ talk about women and about constituencies. We find no evidence of curvilinear trends in talk about women
related to changes in government and female parliamentary presence. We also find that female MPs can be considered critical actors with regard to constituency talk.
Publisher
Bristol University Press
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,Gender Studies
Cited by
1 articles.
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