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This book is an actor-centred sociological study of the EU-level
processes that produce gender equality policy. Based on interviews
and documentary analysis, the study unpacks the process of the
"Roadmap for Equality between Women and Men 2006-2010" to explain
the different roles of actors in the making of EU gender equality
policies. By analysing policy processes inside institutions and
among institutions, the study focuses on the internal working
logics in and between EU-level institutions. It highlights the
shifting spaces, openings, and constraints for the development of
gender equality policies. Concentrating on EU policy programmes
helps shed light on the invisible aspects of EU gender equality
policy-making and how this process changed regarding actors,
structure and content in the late 2000s. This book will be of
interest to students and scholars in the fields of EU politics,
gender politics, and public policy, as well as to institutional and
non-governmental actors in the area of gender politics in Europe
and the working of EU politics.
This book takes stock of German gender equality in several policy
fields after 16 years of governments led by Angela Merkel and her
conservative Christian Democratic Party (CDU). While maintaining
its status as an economic engine in Europe, Germany has
historically been a laggard in adopting gender equality measures.
The European Gender Equality Index, however, now ranks Germany
relatively high and shows substantial progress since 2005. While
this has gone mostly unnoticed, Germany has passed far-reaching
legislation in major policy fields relevant for gender equality.
Investigating the effects of Merkel's tenure on gender equality,
the chapters in this volume assess policy output and outcomes with
a focus on internal power dynamics in Germany, as well as
international and European Union (EU)-level pressures in the policy
domains of political representation, LGBTI rights, migration, the
labor market, and care. It examines how policy measures introduced
by conservative governments affect gender norms and gender culture,
and if they ultimately lead to effective implementation and greater
equality. The book argues that Merkel often led "from behind,"
indirectly facilitating claims-making instead of proactively
pushing them. This nonetheless contributed to transformative change
in Germany, by Merkel not blocking policy proposals and allowing
civil society groups and rival parties to push many progressive
gender policies. Leading from Behind: Gender Equality in Germany
During the Merkel Era is a fascinating read for students,
researchers, and academics interested in European politics,
political leadership, gender equality and LGBTI politics. This book
was originally published as a special issue of German Politics.
This open access volume is a hands-on guide to doing qualitative
research in parliaments that explores the practical achievements
and drawbacks for academic researchers at various career stages.
From early-career scholars looking for an ‘in’ to start their
research to senior academics interested in the methodological
details of colleagues’ work, the book offers a novel approach to
discussing qualitative methodologies and presents unique insights
based on a large-scale qualitative study in one parliament.Â
The comprehensive yet accessible ‘manual’ details the
step-by-step process of qualitative research in parliaments,
offering a reflexive and analytical perspective that moves beyond a
textbook or theory-only format. It uses the European Parliament as
setting and context and builds its contribution on a significantly
large interview and ethnographic dataset.
This open access book provides the first ever authoritative
collection of scholarly insights, based upon original research,
into the political groups of the EP tackling the fundamental
changes since the Lisbon Treaty and the upsurge of radical right
parties. It analyses political groups and their importance from
multiple perspectives critically assessing their role and
significance in EU politics. Each chapter is authored by leading
scholars in the field, working on key topics in relation to
political groups: political group formation and function, their
role in parliamentary and EU policy-making, the way that
Eurosceptic MEPs influence (or not) the Parliament, and the nature
and form of interactions with external actors. In doing so, each
chapter opens hitherto unexplored 'black boxes' in the political
work of the EP, such as the internal practices of, and power
relations within the political groups, and informal arenas of
intra-group decision-making.
Gendering the European Parliament: Structures, Policies and
Practices provides a multifaceted innovative analysis of the EP by
studying it comprehensively from a gender perspective addressing
changes and continuities. It asks how and why the EP, as an
institution, is gendered and what the gendered impacts of recent
changes are when it comes to the structures, policies and practices
of the EP. This collection brings together scholars from a variety
of different disciplines (sociology, political sciences, law,
management studies and cultural studies) as well as theoretical and
methodological backgrounds who are united by their ability to
provide the puzzle pieces necessary to fully comprehend the EP from
a gender perspective.
While the European Commission as agenda-setter of EU policies has
been scrutinized in detail, the European Parliament still requires
a comprehensive investigation that addresses the European
Parliament as a gendered institution and its gendered impacts on EU
policies. This book provides a multi-faceted innovative analysis of
the EP by studying it comprehensively from a gender perspective
addressing changes and continuities. It asks how and why the EP, as
an institution, is gendered and what the gendered impacts of recent
changes are when it comes to the structures, policies and practices
of the EP. The book brings together scholars from a variety of
theoretical and methodological backgrounds. They are united by
their ability to provide the puzzle pieces necessary to fully
comprehend the EP from a gender perspective. The different
disciplines (sociology, political sciences, law, management
studies, cultural studies) bring together different methodological
approaches. The collection functions as a fruitful laboratory for
exchange among different approaches. We investigate
institutionalisation in the EP in a broad fashion, analysing the
development of organisational patterns, rules and procedures and
their effect on gender equality as well as revealing operational
aspects, the dynamics of the political groups and balance between
legislature and executive and their impact on this policy field.
This book provides a timely and unique contribution to current
debates on how effectively voluntary party quotas address the
persistent underrepresentation of women in legislatures. Using a
most similar case design and a mixed-methods approach, the authors
draw attention to the ways in which electoral systems and party
regulations interface with voluntary party quotas in Germany and
Austria. All quota parties in these countries support the goal of
equal participation of women and men in elected office, and quotas
are presented as a means to precisely that end. In order to assess
parties' commitment to their declared goals, and the effectiveness
of quotas, the book introduces the concept of the post-quota gender
gap and defines it as the difference between a party's adopted
quota and the actual share of women in legislative bodies at the
national and regional level. Complementing the existing literature
on recruitment and socio-cultural legacies, the authors argue that
the problem of voluntary party quotas lies at the intersection of
party quota design and electoral law. Either parties need to design
quotas that actually work within a given electoral system, or we
need legislative action geared toward advancing parity not just in
candidate selection, but in the composition of legislatures. The
book draws on gendered candidate and election data, on the party
statutes of federal and state-level party organizations, and on
interviews with party officials and party women's organizations.
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