Handbook on Gender and Corruption in Democracies

Handbook on Gender and Corruption in Democracies

Beaulieu, Emily; Barnes, Tiffany D.

Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd

09/2024

466

Dura

9781803923239

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Contents

1 Introduction to the handbook on gender and corruption in democracies 1
Tiffany D. Barnes and Emily Beaulieu
PART I THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES AND ADVANCEMENTS
2 Gender, accountability, and corruption: new directions 17
Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer
3 The women's interest mechanism and pathways to lower levels of corruption 30
Lena Waengnerud
4 How can ethics of care theory expand and deepen our understanding of
how gender is related to corruption in theory and policy praxis? 39
Helena Olofsdotter Stensoeta
5 Can female legislators reduce corruption when corruption is self-reinforcing? 47
Joel W. Simmons and Analia Gomez Vidal
6 Gender, corruption perceptions, and political evaluations 65
Gregory W. Saxton
PART II IDENTIFYING AND REFINING CORRUPTION CONCEPTS
7 Sexual forms of corruption and sextortion: how to expand research in
a sensitive area 78
Aksel Sundstroem and Lena Waengnerud
8 Women's representation and varieties of corruption: why distinguishing
between different forms of corruption matters 93
Monika Bauhr
9 Clientelism, corruption, and gender 102
Mariela Daby and Mason W. Moseley
10 Risk averse or pro-social: sorting out why women are less corrupt than
men with new experimental research 117
Ina Kubbe, Amy Alexander and Lena Waengnerud
PART III RESEARCH APPROACHES AND CHALLENGES
11 The changing relationship between gender and corruption 126
Justin Esarey and Maya Dalton
12 Experiments on gender and corruption 138
Mia Costa
13 Data sources for the study of gender and corruption 147
Kelly Senters Piazza and Gustavo Diaz
14 Ethics and the study of gender and corruption 161
Sophia Lipkin and Dawn Langan Teele
PART IV GENDER AND CORRUPTION ACROSS INSTITUTIONS
15 Corruption, gender, and elections: the presence of female candidates on
party lists after corruption scandals in Chile and Uruguay 174
Emily Elia
16 Altering the status quo: examining second chamber reform and
anti-corruption efforts under parliamentary bicameralism 191
David Fisk
17 Gender, corruption, and presidential politics 204
Catherine Reyes-Housholder
18 Gender, cabinet ministers, and corruption 217
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson and Cristian Calzada
19 Gender, representation, and corruption in local governments 234
Kendall D. Funk and Malu A. C. Gatto
PART V BROADENING CULTURAL CONTEXTS
20 Corruption and gendered access to public services in global south democracies 247
Lucia Kovacikova and Ruth Carlitz
21 The effects of gender stereotypes on citizens' perceptions of corruption:
evidence from a conjoint survey experiment in Malaysia 263
Holly E. Jansen
22 Women and corruption in South Asia 279
Ankita Barthwal and Francesca R. Jensenius
23 Gender and corruption in China: negotiating female officials' place in
a gendered dual-track system 293
Wenyan Tu and Xinhui Jiang
24 Mixed-member systems, corruption, and accountability: evidence from Taiwan 306
Jingwen Wu, Tiffany D. Barnes, Nathan Batto and Emily Beaulieu
25 Gender bias as a form of corruption in recourse seeking behavior:
lessons from a 31-country cross-national analysis in the Africa region 319
Adryan Wallace
PART VI RESEARCH FRONTIERS IN GENDER AND CORRUPTION
26 Behavioral consequences of corruption: protest 339
V Ximena Velasco-Guachalla and Karolina Mathesova
27 When the body is the payment: taking a closer look at sextortion 360
Ortrun Merkle
28 At the mercy of predatory corruption: women in Mexico's prisons 371
Milena Ang and Yuna Blajer de la Garza
29 Corruption as a male-biased institution 385
Elin Bjarnegard
References 394
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Women in politics; Accountability; Sextortion; Corruption and institutions; Gender stereotypes; Representation