Gendered Ambivalence: The Structure of Attitudes About Female Candidates
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Abstract
I argue that the gender-role incongruity between being a woman and the masculine stereotypes of political leadership roles will lead to more ambivalence about women relative to men and that gendered traits will comprise the content of these ambivalent attitudes. I analyze attitudinal ambivalence toward female candidates using ANES data. The results find that ambivalence is higher among voters who hold cross-pressured identities as strong partisans with sexist beliefs for both Democratic and Republican women. In 2016, individuals held stronger ambivalent attitudes about Hillary Clinton even among strong Democrats but there was very little ambivalence in attitudes about Trump.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Journal of Women, Politics and Policy
First Page
375
Last Page
393
Recommended Citation
Bauer, N. (2024). Gendered Ambivalence: The Structure of Attitudes About Female Candidates. Journal of Women, Politics and Policy, 45 (4), 375-393. https://doi.org/10.1080/1554477X.2023.2257122