Campaigns as Gendered Institutions: A Case Study Between B.C. Premier and California Gubernational Campaigns

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Michelle Irving

Abstract

This paper will explore campaigns as gendered institutions using Acker’s framework of gendered organizations. Acker notes political institutions are defined by the absence of women, and campaigns are no different. This paper will explore two case studies: British Columbia’s 2017 Provincial Election and California’s 2010 Gubernational Race to identify how gendered institutions operate across electoral races. The framework of gendered institutions is applied by exploring how four components: the historical bias in job evaluation and candidate selection of the preferred “gender” traits; the decisions and procedures that control and construct hierarchies based on gender; the construction of symbols and gender ideology that give legitimacy to the institution and the process of “doing gender”. The case studies demonstrate that campaigns generally seem to be gendered in the same way with the exception of how campaign fundraising operates, which warrants further investigation. Additional research is needed to understand the extent to which campaigns as gendered institutions operate across political systems. 

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Author Biography

Michelle Irving, Memorial University

I am in my second year of a two-year Masters program in Political Science at Memorial University of Newfoundland. My thesis work is focused on the social media accounts of provincial candidates in Western Canada and how their gendered self-presentation, defined by behaviour traits and policy issues, relate to stereotypes.