Gender and opposition leadership in the Pacific Islands
Gender and opposition leadership in the Pacific Islands
Parliaments in the Pacific Islands are among the most male‐dominated in the world. Yet despite the odds, there is a cohort of women who have been elected and won senior roles. This article adds to an emerging literature that examines the gendered pathways to political influence in the region by focusing on the hitherto overlooked role of the opposition leader. It uses a biographical approach to consider the pathways in and through this role by four women opposition leaders: Fiame Naomi Mata’afa (Samoa), Hilda Heine (Marshall Islands), Dame Carol Kidu (Papua New Guinea), and Ro eimumu Kepa (Fiji). We parse out factors that explain the success of these leaders while also identifying barriers that have prevented their emergence in other Pacific states. We identify two main ways in which women politicians have used the position of leader of the opposition: first, the conventional understanding of the role as a path to power; and second, the less well‐understood role of defending and protecting democratic norms and institutions. The latter can be interpreted as a version of the “glass cliff” phenomenon where women leaders assume key positions in times of crisis. Our findings thus highlight that while in the Pacific the role of leader of the opposition can be a path to power, the relatively few women leaders who have taken on this role have used it in diverse and varied ways.
Pacific Islands, gender, glass cliff, leader of the opposition, political parties
130-140
Baker, Kerryn
6eb91896-3601-416e-87e2-1c2f8fbb27ec
Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
22 February 2023
Baker, Kerryn
6eb91896-3601-416e-87e2-1c2f8fbb27ec
Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
Baker, Kerryn and Corbett, Jack
(2023)
Gender and opposition leadership in the Pacific Islands.
Politics and Governance, 11 (1), .
(doi:10.17645/pag.v11i1.6065).
Abstract
Parliaments in the Pacific Islands are among the most male‐dominated in the world. Yet despite the odds, there is a cohort of women who have been elected and won senior roles. This article adds to an emerging literature that examines the gendered pathways to political influence in the region by focusing on the hitherto overlooked role of the opposition leader. It uses a biographical approach to consider the pathways in and through this role by four women opposition leaders: Fiame Naomi Mata’afa (Samoa), Hilda Heine (Marshall Islands), Dame Carol Kidu (Papua New Guinea), and Ro eimumu Kepa (Fiji). We parse out factors that explain the success of these leaders while also identifying barriers that have prevented their emergence in other Pacific states. We identify two main ways in which women politicians have used the position of leader of the opposition: first, the conventional understanding of the role as a path to power; and second, the less well‐understood role of defending and protecting democratic norms and institutions. The latter can be interpreted as a version of the “glass cliff” phenomenon where women leaders assume key positions in times of crisis. Our findings thus highlight that while in the Pacific the role of leader of the opposition can be a path to power, the relatively few women leaders who have taken on this role have used it in diverse and varied ways.
Text
Gender and Opposition Leadership
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 December 2022
Published date: 22 February 2023
Keywords:
Pacific Islands, gender, glass cliff, leader of the opposition, political parties
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Local EPrints ID: 476174
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476174
ISSN: 2183-2463
PURE UUID: 2b7c9465-542d-4773-803e-740b2ff9449d
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Date deposited: 13 Apr 2023 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 01:01
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Author:
Kerryn Baker
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