University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
What Women Want: Gender and Voting in Britain, Japan and the United States
Gill Steel
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.Log in
What Women Want analyzes decades of voting preferences, values, and policy preferences to debunk some of the media and academic myths about gender gaps in voting and policy preferences. Findings show that no single theory explains when differences in women's and men's voting preferences emerge, when they do not, or when changes—or the lack thereof—occur over time. Steel extends existing theories to create a broader framework for thinking about gender and voting behavior to provide more analytical purchase in understanding gender and its varying effects on individual voters' preferences. She incorporates the long-term effects of party identification and class politics on political decision-making, particularly in how they influence preferences on social provision and on expectations of the state. She also points to the importance of symbolic politics
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Tables and Figures
Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
One. Does Gender Matter in Voting?
Two. Identifying Voter Patterns
Three. Women, Men, and Party Choice
Four. What Women (and Men) Want
Five. Desperately Seeking the Supervoter
Six. What Women Get
Conclusion
Appendices
Appendix A. Coding and Method
Appendix B. Logistic Regression Analysis of Voting in US Presidential Elections (Ref: Republican Party)
Appendix C. Multinomial Probit Analysis of Selected British General Elections (Ref: Labour)
Appendix D. Multinomial Probit Analysis of Japanese Lower House Elections