More social, less material, more influenced by family ties: why young women join political parties
More social, less material, more influenced by family ties: why young women join political parties
Do young women and men join political parties for different reasons? To investigate, we theorize the following: first, women will be more attracted by social incentives and men by material ones, while purposive incentives will be equally appealing to both; second, before signing up, women will have more party-affiliated family ties than men; and third, these ties will moderate the gender gap in incentives. Drawing on YOUMEM survey data from over 3500 youth wing members of the main center-left and center-right parties in Australia, Austria, Germany, Italy, and Spain, we find strong support for our argument. Our results show that, already in this early – but crucial – part of the pipeline to power, the incentives for joining parties are gendered: young women are more mobilized by social benefits, and less so by material ones. In addition, they are more likely than men to have party-affiliated family ties, indicating that these resources are particularly valuable to them in overcoming the disadvantages they face when entering politics. Notably, family ties boost women’s purposive motivations more than men’s, but they also reduce women’s material motivations to a greater extent. Our findings indicate that if parties are interested in recruiting more young women, they should emphasize the social rewards of membership in their recruitment campaigns.
Ammassari, Sofia
71de6988-b1d1-4681-90c0-1719f2a4c62c
McDonnell, Duncan
e1c7e6ca-12c6-49a7-b2aa-a03e518c4910
Werner, Annika
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Heinisch, Reinhard
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Valbruzzi, Marco
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Wegscheider, Carsten
b56703ca-d0b9-4c93-a823-4a986bf09736
Ammassari, Sofia
71de6988-b1d1-4681-90c0-1719f2a4c62c
McDonnell, Duncan
e1c7e6ca-12c6-49a7-b2aa-a03e518c4910
Werner, Annika
dcafc9c0-9649-427b-b550-04d03e3c0b24
Heinisch, Reinhard
d0c3357b-5aad-4c75-9f6a-14f006843267
Valbruzzi, Marco
eaf5936d-9ab5-4c8e-b038-e4ea756d156c
Wegscheider, Carsten
b56703ca-d0b9-4c93-a823-4a986bf09736
Ammassari, Sofia, McDonnell, Duncan, Werner, Annika, Heinisch, Reinhard, Valbruzzi, Marco and Wegscheider, Carsten
(2026)
More social, less material, more influenced by family ties: why young women join political parties.
European Journal of Political Research.
(doi:10.1017/S1475676526100978).
Abstract
Do young women and men join political parties for different reasons? To investigate, we theorize the following: first, women will be more attracted by social incentives and men by material ones, while purposive incentives will be equally appealing to both; second, before signing up, women will have more party-affiliated family ties than men; and third, these ties will moderate the gender gap in incentives. Drawing on YOUMEM survey data from over 3500 youth wing members of the main center-left and center-right parties in Australia, Austria, Germany, Italy, and Spain, we find strong support for our argument. Our results show that, already in this early – but crucial – part of the pipeline to power, the incentives for joining parties are gendered: young women are more mobilized by social benefits, and less so by material ones. In addition, they are more likely than men to have party-affiliated family ties, indicating that these resources are particularly valuable to them in overcoming the disadvantages they face when entering politics. Notably, family ties boost women’s purposive motivations more than men’s, but they also reduce women’s material motivations to a greater extent. Our findings indicate that if parties are interested in recruiting more young women, they should emphasize the social rewards of membership in their recruitment campaigns.
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 March 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 511490
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511490
ISSN: 0304-4130
PURE UUID: 72658315-c143-4041-8282-c1690d68ce2f
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Date deposited: 18 May 2026 16:34
Last modified: 19 May 2026 02:11
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Contributors
Author:
Sofia Ammassari
Author:
Duncan McDonnell
Author:
Annika Werner
Author:
Reinhard Heinisch
Author:
Marco Valbruzzi
Author:
Carsten Wegscheider
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