The under-representation of women in American politics can likely be explained, at least in part, by women’s comparatively lower levels of political ambition. We analyze a co-ed, religious program for high school students in which participants lobby their Members of Congress and receive political skills training. By leveraging longitudinal survey data about the participants and a difference-indifferences design, we find that the program successfully increased the political ambition of its female participants. To the best of our knowledge, we offer the first quasi-experimental evidence demonstrating a possible means of increasing the political ambition of high school-aged American women. Our results demonstrate that female political ambition can be increased without relying on programs that explicitly focus on gender and ambition.
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28 April 2022
Research Article|
April 28 2022
Can the Political Ambition of Young Women Be Increased? Evidence from U.S. High School Students Available to Purchase
Joshua Kalla;
Joshua Kalla
Department of Political Science and Department of Statistics and Data Science,
Yale University
, New Haven, CT, USA
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Ethan Porter
Ethan Porter
George Washington University
, Washington, DC, USA
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*
We thank the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, especially Sara Barrack, Sophie Kaplan, and Shira Zemel for implementation. We thank Danny Hayes, Jennifer Lawless, John Sides, Chris Warshaw, and Ronit Zemel for their comments. Casey Danoff provided excellent research assistance. This research was approved by the George Washington University Institutional Review Board, IRB #80459. All errors are our responsibility alone.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2022 J. Kalla and E. Porter
2022
J. Kalla and E. Porter
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2022) 17 (2): 259–281.
Citation
Kalla J, Porter E (2022), "Can the Political Ambition of Young Women Be Increased? Evidence from U.S. High School Students". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 17 No. 2 pp. 259–281, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00020106
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