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Ministerial Politics in Southeastern Europe: Appointment and Portfolio Allocation to Female Ministers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2019

Ekaterina R. Rashkova
Affiliation:
Utrecht University
Emilia Zankina
Affiliation:
American University in Bulgaria
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Abstract

In light of the growing scholarship on women's representation in the executive, we examine whether extant theories on the determinants of female ministerial appointments apply to and explain the role of women in the executive in new democracies. We are further interested in better understanding the dynamics of portfolio allocation to female ministers. Given the different meanings that the political left and right carry in new compared with established democracies, we argue that ministerial appointments and portfolio allocations reflect this difference and therefore show diverse results. Presenting data on women ministers in five southeastern European states between 1990 and 2018, we analyze the descriptive representation of women at the highest echelons of political power. We establish that while the standard claim found in the literature that left political parties stage more women and with more progressive views, as shown primarily in scholarship on Western democracies, southeastern European women ministers who are given portfolios traditionally reserved for men are appointed primarily by parties of the right. Moreover, we find little support for the link between legislative and executive representation; rather, we see that the appointment of women ministers is related to the institutionalization level of the parties in power.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Women and Politics Research Section of the American Political Science Association 2019 
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Figure 1. Percentage of women in senior ministerial positions in Europe. Senior ministers are defined as members of the government who have a seat on the cabinet or council of ministers. Source: European Commission Gender in Decision-Making Database, http://ec.europa.eu/justice/gender-equality/gender-decision-making/database/politics/national-governments/index_en.htm.

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Table 1. Female ministers in postcommunist Bulgaria, 1990–2018

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Table 2. Female ministers in Croatia, 1990–2018

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Table 3. Female ministers in post-Yugoslav Macedonia, 1990–2017

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Table 4. Female ministers in postcommunist Romania, 1990–2018

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Table 5. Female ministers in post-Yugoslav Serbia, 2000–2018

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Figure 2. Proportion of female versus male ministers in southeastern Europe, 1990–2014. Countries included are Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Romania, and Serbia. The data used to create this chart are cumulative over the studied period. Source: Data originally collected by the authors.

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Table 6. Distribution of portfolios over time for Bulgaria and Romania

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Table 7. Distribution of female portfolios in SEE from 1990-2018*

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Table 8. Female ministers in postcommunist southeastern Europe, based on party ideology*

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Table 9. Distribution of female portfolios in southeastern Europe, 1990–2018*