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If the rewards of becoming a politician or tech CEO are outweighed by an unsurvivable hit to social status or future career prospects, they may quite rationally choose to pour their energies into something else. They know a cautionary tale when they see one. No, women are not suffering from some internal confidence “issue”, or failure of imagination. (Which begs the question: why didn’t any other women think of that?) These mean well but, in a bid to emphasise the achievements of their chosen pathbreakers, often end up with the unwittingly sexist thesis that all it takes to overcome centuries of entrenched misogyny is one woman with a bit of gumption and ideas above her station. This is of a piece, I think, with the messages pumped out by a recent rash of “feminist” period films and books with titles like “brilliant historical women you should know about”.
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Can’t women think themselves into an astronaut suit or corner office unless someone called Emily has done it before them? Is this really the problem? This makes sense – after all, the idea that “role models” are central to female aspiration is patronising, as if the only limit to female success is their own self-confidence and imagination. Women are actively deterred from the job. If these prominent women are treated with social disdain – if derision and hostility lower their status, despite their title – following in their footsteps becomes unappetising. Simply placing women in high-ranking jobs is not enough.
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Women who dared to work in Zambia were derided as prostitutes, according to research by Dr Alice Evans at King’s College London, which put others off, until that changed. In fact, in the most misogynistic Indian states, the election of a woman heralded a significant decline in new female candidates at the next election. A survey of young Australian women with political aspirations found eight out of 10 were less likely to enter politics as a consequence of the negative media treatment Gillard suffered.ĭoes female representation bring about social change? Not according to a large and wide-ranging study of Indian state elections by Professor Lakshmi Iyer of the University of Notre Dame, who found female electoral victories had no effect on the numbers of aspiring female politicians (a 2013 study found the same to be true in the US). There is a similar element to Julia Gillard’s legacy. Joyce Banda became Malawi’s first female president in 2012 but in the 2014 elections, where she was defeated, the number of female MPs went from 43 to 33. Knutson was not the only woman to find herself inadvertently double-glazing the glass ceiling while she was up there. It would be another 40 years before Minnesota elected another female member of Congress. She was effective in office, but faced vicious scorn for being a “career woman” who was neglecting her family. In 1955, she became the first woman elected to Congress from Minnesota. Take, for example, the story of Coya Knutson – a brilliant, pathbreaking woman, if you ever saw one. The more brilliant women girls get to hear about, the wider their horizons. This is certainly the message of International Women’s Day – which last month brought us endless lists of “ kickass female role models” – the key, the footnotes read, to female aspiration. If you want young women to succeed, the logic goes, the best thing you can do is supply them with as many role models as possible. There’s an unexamined assumption – or perhaps a mantra – at the heart of this: the idea that representation is everything when it comes to female advancement. Can’t women think themselves into an astronaut suit unless someone called Emily has done it before? Meanwhile, women are flooding out of tech, just as they flooded in a few years ago. In the past two decades, the number of women in global politics has risen dramatically.
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Yet, as women – including British female MPs – limp away from office, demoralised by abuse and succeeded by men, one wonders just how much inspiration their stories offer to younger people. Does every appointment of a female leader need to be a “breakthrough moment” for women? We hear this story endlessly – Jacinda Ardern, prime minister of New Zealand until last January Sanna Marin, the outgoing prime minister of Finland and Natalia Gavrilița, prime minister of Moldova until last February, were all profiled as pathbreakers who would herald a new generation of female politicians.
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