Gender, disability and political representation: understanding the experiences of disabled women
Gender, disability and political representation: understanding the experiences of disabled women
Women face multiple barriers during political recruitment and representational processes. Concomitantly, a burgeoning scholarship has revealed the existence of various obstacles to elected office faced by disabled people. While studies have examined the intersections between gender, race and class, we know little about how the intersection between disability and gender shapes people’s experiences. This article provides an exploratory case-study analysis of the UK. We centre the perspectives of disabled women in our analysis, drawing upon qualitative interviews undertaken with 41 disabled women candidates, politicians and party activists, as well as participant observation of online events organised to discuss disabled women and elected office. Three themes emerged from this research: first, disabled women feel that they are perceived as ‘not up to the job’; second, disabled women are ‘othered’ during recruitment processes; and, third, hyper-visibility experienced by some, but not all, disabled women can be experienced positively but mainly negatively.
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Evans, Elizabeth
f1b57f4f-f30d-4cec-bec0-eeddb228afd9
Reher, Stefanie
883d4c89-a1b8-40fd-9215-1801aee4f828
Evans, Elizabeth
f1b57f4f-f30d-4cec-bec0-eeddb228afd9
Reher, Stefanie
883d4c89-a1b8-40fd-9215-1801aee4f828
Evans, Elizabeth and Reher, Stefanie
(2023)
Gender, disability and political representation: understanding the experiences of disabled women.
European Journal of Politics and Gender, .
(doi:10.1332/251510823X16779382116831).
Abstract
Women face multiple barriers during political recruitment and representational processes. Concomitantly, a burgeoning scholarship has revealed the existence of various obstacles to elected office faced by disabled people. While studies have examined the intersections between gender, race and class, we know little about how the intersection between disability and gender shapes people’s experiences. This article provides an exploratory case-study analysis of the UK. We centre the perspectives of disabled women in our analysis, drawing upon qualitative interviews undertaken with 41 disabled women candidates, politicians and party activists, as well as participant observation of online events organised to discuss disabled women and elected office. Three themes emerged from this research: first, disabled women feel that they are perceived as ‘not up to the job’; second, disabled women are ‘othered’ during recruitment processes; and, third, hyper-visibility experienced by some, but not all, disabled women can be experienced positively but mainly negatively.
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Accepted EJPG paper 2023
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2023 EJPG gender and disability
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 March 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 March 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 487663
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487663
ISSN: 2515-1088
PURE UUID: 8b5b718e-6c55-4d1a-8ced-e783ca4bba10
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Date deposited: 29 Feb 2024 18:15
Last modified: 28 Mar 2024 05:01
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Author:
Elizabeth Evans
Author:
Stefanie Reher
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