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Targeting the cereal woman: campaigns, gender, and Scottish independence

Targeting the cereal woman: campaigns, gender, and Scottish independence
Targeting the cereal woman: campaigns, gender, and Scottish independence
How do political campaigns construct and mobilize voter identities in high-stakes constitutional contests? This article examines the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum through twenty-three elite interviews with campaign actors from Yes Scotland and Better Together. It finds that both campaigns targeted women using gendered assumptions about risk, care, and economic security and were shaped by male-dominated leadership and normative logics. The study finds that these strategies not only responded to gendered voter cleavages but also actively reinforced voter identities. By analysing how gender shaped strategic thinking, message design, and organizational culture, the article contributes to broader debates on electoral behaviour, political representation, and the strategies of campaigns in shaping democratic choice.
0031-2290
Belknap, Emilia Y.
66f43d74-cefc-4ca8-a8a3-cbacaf19fdf1
Belknap, Emilia Y.
66f43d74-cefc-4ca8-a8a3-cbacaf19fdf1

Belknap, Emilia Y. (2025) Targeting the cereal woman: campaigns, gender, and Scottish independence. Parliamentary Affairs. (doi:10.1093/pa/gsaf056).

Record type: Article

Abstract

How do political campaigns construct and mobilize voter identities in high-stakes constitutional contests? This article examines the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum through twenty-three elite interviews with campaign actors from Yes Scotland and Better Together. It finds that both campaigns targeted women using gendered assumptions about risk, care, and economic security and were shaped by male-dominated leadership and normative logics. The study finds that these strategies not only responded to gendered voter cleavages but also actively reinforced voter identities. By analysing how gender shaped strategic thinking, message design, and organizational culture, the article contributes to broader debates on electoral behaviour, political representation, and the strategies of campaigns in shaping democratic choice.

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Accepted/In Press date: 24 November 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 December 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510053
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510053
ISSN: 0031-2290
PURE UUID: d430a7b8-5282-42ce-b554-ebe46c52e060
ORCID for Emilia Y. Belknap: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0007-8262-1466

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Date deposited: 16 Mar 2026 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2026 03:10

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Author: Emilia Y. Belknap ORCID iD

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