Female Representation and Electoral Clientelism: New Insights from South African Municipal Elections

Amy Alexander, Nicholas Charron*, Mogens Kamp Justesen

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Do citizens experience less electoral clientelism in polities with more elected female representatives? The current literature is remarkably silent on the role of gender and female political representation for electoral clientelism. Due to gender differences in issue priorities, targeted constituent groups, networks and resources, we argue that voters experience less clientelism in municipalities with a higher proportion of female politicians because either female politicians are likely to engage less in clientelism or women are less likely to be viable candidates in more clientelist settings. Through either mechanism, we expect all voters – and female voters in particular – to experience less exposure to clientelism in municipalities with higher female representation. We examine this idea using survey data from the 2016 municipal elections in South Africa – a country with high levels of female representation in politics but increasing problems of corruption and patronage in the political system. Our findings are consistent with the argument that municipalities with more elected female councilors have considerably lower rates of electoral clientelism and that this mostly affects whether female voters are targeted by clientelist distribution. These findings shed new light on how women's representation in elected political office shapes the incidence and use of clientelist distribution during elections.
Original languageEnglish
Article number102580
JournalElectoral Studies
Issue number82
Number of pages10
ISSN0261-3794
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2023

Bibliographical note

Misspelled subtitle word in article headline: "New insights from South African municipal electionss".

Keywords

  • Elections
  • Clientelism
  • Female representation
  • Vote buying
  • South Africa
  • Local government

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