Follow the Money: Gender, Incumbency, and Campaign Funding in Chile

We examine women’s access to campaign resources using data from all 960 candidates competing in Chile’s 2017 legislative elections. Even when controlling for district characteristics, women candidates receive less money in party transfers, bank loans, and donations; place fewer personal funds in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comparative political studies 2022-02, Vol.55 (2), p.222-253
Hauptverfasser: Piscopo, Jennifer M., Hinojosa, Magda, Thomas, Gwynn, Siavelis, Peter M.
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container_end_page 253
container_issue 2
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container_title Comparative political studies
container_volume 55
creator Piscopo, Jennifer M.
Hinojosa, Magda
Thomas, Gwynn
Siavelis, Peter M.
description We examine women’s access to campaign resources using data from all 960 candidates competing in Chile’s 2017 legislative elections. Even when controlling for district characteristics, women candidates receive less money in party transfers, bank loans, and donations; place fewer personal funds in their campaigns; and have fewer resources overall. However, previous experience and incumbency narrow the gap. When women are newcomers, gender serves as an important cue about candidate quality and funders default to favoring men. Our results lend credence to practitioners’ claims that money disadvantages women candidates in democracies, but focuses attention on the disadvantage faced by women newcomers. Moreover, this gender gap in campaign funding exists despite a gendered electoral financing scheme designed to make political actors more likely to invest in women’s campaigns. While increasingly popular among development experts, our research suggests such schemes might be insufficient for equalizing campaign funding between men and women.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/00104140211024300
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; SAGE Complete
subjects Bank loans
Banking
Campaigns
Candidates
Donations
Elections
Funding
Gender
Incumbency
Money
Newcomers
Political campaigns
Political parties
Women
title Follow the Money: Gender, Incumbency, and Campaign Funding in Chile
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