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The Growth of Women's Representation in the Canadian House of Commons and the Election of 1984: A Reappraisal*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2009

Donley T. Studlar
Affiliation:
West Virginia University
Richard E. Matland
Affiliation:
University of Houston

Abstract

In the 1980s, Canada went from having one of the lowest levels of female representation in its national legislature to having one of the highest among countries with single-member district electoral systems. The authors examine the common assertion that this increase was largely due to the surprising Progressive Conservative landslide in the 1984 federal election. By simulating plausible alternative election results they find there would have been a substantial increase in the number of women in the parliament, regardless of how the vote split in 1984. The simulations are followed by probit analyses for 1980, 1984 and 1988 which examine what factors affected the probability a major-party candidate would be a woman and what factors affected the probability that a successful candidate would be a woman.

Résumé

Le Canada a commencé les années quatre-vingt avec un des plus faibles pourcentages de femmes dans sa législature nationale parmi les pays à circonscription parlementaires uninominales; à la fin de la décennie, ce pourcentage était parmi les plus fort. Les auteurs examinent l'idée répandue voulant que cet accroissement de la représentation féminine soit dû au surprenant ras-de-marée du Parti progressiste conservateur aux élections fédérales de 1984. En simulant plusieurs résultats électoraux alternatifs, les auteurs démontrent qu'il y aurait tout de même eu un accroissement important du nombre de femmes parlementaires en dépit de la forte progression du parti P.-C. Ces simulations sont suivis d'analyses probit des élections de 1980, 1984 et 1988 qui examinent les facteurs déterminant la probabilité de choix d'une femme comme candidate d'un parti majeur, et ceux déterminant la probabilité que le candidat victorieux soit une femme.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1994

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References

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23 We examined the sensitivity of our results by testing for a change in gender make-up if the 32 races where the margin of victory was less than 10 per cent had been won by the party which finished second. In four cases women would have lost seats, but in four other cases the new winning MP would have been a woman.

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46 We should mention a number of additional technical issues which were dealt with in developing this table. The table is based on the probits presented in Table 3. The percentage Catholic and level of unemployment variables were set equal to their means and included in the constant. These two variables have very weak effects and even changing them substantially from the levels they were set at would not have noticeably affected the probability estimates. The ridings are characterized by low, moderate or high levels of women's labour force participation and adults with university education. It is reasonable to couple these variables as they were strongly correlated in the data set (R = .63 and .60). For the estimates of low levels these two variables were set equal to their value at the 25th percentile mark. The moderate estimates were set equal to the value at the 50th percentile, and the high estimates were set equal to the value at the 75th percentile. For the 1980 and 1984 elections, the values for women's labour force participation were 45.33 per cent (25th percentile), 50.44 per cent (50th percentile) and 56.12 per cent (75th percentile). The values for percentage of adult population with some university education were 10.14 per cent (25th percentile), 12.87 per cent (50th percentile) and 18.16 per cent (75th percentile). For the 1988 election, the values for women's labour force participation were 50.51 per cent (25th percentile), 55.40 per cent (50th percentile) and 60.01 per cent (75th percentile). The values for percentage of adult population with some university education were 11.81 per cent (25th percentile), 14.68 per cent (50th percentile) and 21.78 percent (75th percentile).

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