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CAWP Reports and Publications

 Women and U.S. Politics
  

Working paper on "Gender and Civic Engagement" (2005)
CIRCLE has recently released a new working paper by Krista Jenkins entitled, “Gender and Civic Engagement: Secondary Analysis of Survey Data.” Jenkins explores whether gender is salient in civic engagement. For the most part, she determines that “[y]oung women and men appear to be receiving the same cues about politics, elected officials, and the political process.” While the genders appear to behave in a similar fashion, “young women are distinguishing themselves from young men on some key recursors to engagement, particularly attentiveness and knowledge.”
 
Women in State Government: Historical Overview and Current Trends
(2004)
The findings in this study done by CAWP senior scholar Susan J. Carroll raise issues concerning the continued growth of women's participation in state government. As the study states, "[w]omen have significantly increased their numbers among state government officials over the past several decades. However, despite a recent increase in the number of women governors, women’s progress, especially at the statewide elective and state legislative levels, has slowed....Findings such as these suggest that the future for women in state government will depend, at least in part, upon the strength of efforts to actively recruit women for both elected and appointed positions." This article is reprinted with permission from The Book of the States, 2004, published by The Council of State Governments, Lexington, KY 2004.
 
The Impact of Women in Public Office
(2001)
The studies reported in this new book (2001, Indiana University Press), edited by CAWP senior scholar Susan J. Carroll, examine the impact of women public officials serving in various offices and locales at local, state, and national levels. Read more about the book and find out how to order it from the above link.
 
Gender Differences in Print Media Coverage of Presidential Candidates:
Elizabeth Dole's Bid for the Republican Nomination
 (.pdf) (2000)
This report examines Elizabeth Dole's bid for the Republican presidential nomination and the ways in which gender bias affected media coverage.

 
 Women in the U.S. Congress
  Legislating By and For Women:
A Comparison of the 103rd and 104th Congresses
 (.pdf) (2001)
This report examines the political work of women legislators in the 103rd and 104th congresses as they attempted to transform their commitment to represent women into law. The report highlights examples of the intensive political labor involved in any effort to legislate for women and explores how women’s needs and interests are defined in the legislative process. The authors of the report are Mary Hawkesworth, Debra Dodson, Katherine E. Kleeman, Kathleen J. Casey and Krista Jenkins.
 
Representing Women:
Congresswomen's Perceptions of Their Representational Roles
 (.pdf) (2000)
This report assesses the extent to which women members of Congress see themselves and act as surrogate representatives for women who may live beyond the borders of their districts. (Data based on larger CAWP report on women members of the 103rd and 104th Congresses.)
 
Voices, Views, Votes: Women in the 103rd Congress
  (.pdf) (1995)
This report examines how the women in the 103rd Congress acted to shape the content of legislation, to build support for bills, and to create a political environment in which they could effect change. The research focuses on five policy areas in which there was substantial legislative action during the 103rd Congress: women's health, reproductive rights, health care reform, the Omnibus Crime Bill, and the North American Free Trade Agreement.
 
 Women in State Legislatures
  Are U.S. Women State Legislators Accountable to Women?
The Complimentary Roles of Feminist Identity and Women's Organizations
(2003)
This report was prepared by Susan J. Carroll, senior CAWP scholar, for a conference held at St. John's College, University of Manitoba, in May, 2003. An introductory paragraph briefly describes the report's contents. "While we have considerable evidence that women legislators give greater priority to women’s issues than their male colleagues, we know less about why they do so. What is the process underlying the substantive representation of women by women legislators? Why does the representation of women by women legislators happen? This paper examines these questions with particular attention to the role of women’s organizations and networks."
 
Women State Legislators: Past, Present and Future
(.pdf) (2001)
In 2001, with funding from the Barbara Lee Family Foundation, CAWP surveyed female and male state legislators and compared the new data with prior CAWP research findings. The initial brief research reports include descriptions of women legislators today and comparisons with their male colleagues as well as with their 1988 counterparts.
 
Findings at a Glance: Summary Report on CAWP's Study of Women State Legislators  (.pdf) (1991)
This report is a brief summary of selected findings from CAWP's study of women state legislators, Reshaping the Agenda: Women in State Legislatures. (1988) 
 
Equality Deferred: Women Candidates for the New Jersey Assembly 1920-1993  (.pdf) (1994)
This report is a study of women candidates for state legislature in New Jersey. Written by Richard P. and Katheryne C. McCormick, this report is specific to New Jersey, although as noted by Ruth B. Mandel, director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics, in the foreword:
    The McCormicks have identified distinctive features of the political history and culture of the state that have shaped women's possibilities for political participation. At the same time, their work is a model for the kind of inquiry that might be useful in every state....
 
 The Effect of Term Limits on Women and Minorities
  "Unrealized Opportunity? Term Limits and the Representation of Women in State Legislatures" (2001)
A general overview on the effect of term limits on the numbers of women in elective office. In this article, using data from the state legislative elections of 1998 and 2000, Professor Susan J. Carroll and Krista Jenkins, a research associate at CAWP,examine empirically the expectation prevalent in the women and politics literature that the implementation of term limits will lead to increases in the numbers of women legislators.
 
"Increasing Diversity or More of the Same? Term Limits and the Representation of Women, Minorities, and Minority Women in State Legislatures" (2001)
A general overview on the effect of term limits on the numbers of women and minorities in elective office. This paper, written by Professor Susan J. Carroll and research associate Krista Jenkins, examines the question of whether term limits lead to greater diversity among legislators in terms of their gender, race, and ethnicity. Their findings from an analysis of electoral outcomes in states where term limits were in effect in 1998 and 2000 suggest that the answer to the question of whether term limits lead to more diverse legislatures is not straightforward.
 

"The Impact of Term Limits on Women" (2001)
In an article written by Susan J. Carroll, CAWP Senior Scholar, published in Spectrum: The Journal of State Government, Fall 2001, information is presented that finds "contrary to the expectation of term-limit advocates and many scholars, the number of women serving in term-limited statehouse seats actually decreased following the 1998 and 2000 elections."
 
Term Limits and the Representation of Women (2001)
In November, 1999 CAWP convened a meeting in New Brunswick, New Jersey to examine preliminary data on the impact of term limits on women’s representation and to explore how women might capitalize upon the political opportunities created by term limits. CAWP invited representatives from twelve states in which term limits have already become effective (Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Oregon, and South Dakota). This monograph, authored by Mary Hawkesworth and Katherine E. Kleeman, reports on the conference and on early findings about the impact of term limits on women's representation.
 

  

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