01614pab a2200181 454500008004000000100002100040245008200061260000900143300001300152362000800165520107200173650002201245773002901267908000601296909001001302999001701312952010301329180718b2010 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aMcDonagh, Eileen aIt takes a state: a policy feedback model of women's political representation c2010 ap.69-91. aMar aAmerican women attain more professional success in medicine, business, and higher education than do most of their counterparts around the world. an enduring puzzle is, therefore, why the US lags so far behind other countries when it comes to women's political repr3esentation. In 2008, women held only 16.8 percent of seats in the House of Representatives, a proportion that ranks America lower than 83 other countries. This article addresses this conundrum. It establishes that equal rights alone are insufficient to ensure equal access to political office. Also necessary are public policies representing maternal traits that voters associate with women. Such policies have feedback effects that reach voters that the maternal traits attributed to women represent strengths not only in the private sphere of the home but also in the public sphere of the state. Most other democracies now have such policies in place, but the United States lacks such policies, which accounts for its laggard status with regard to the political representation of women. - Reproduced. aWomen in politics aPerspectives on Politics aN a87216 c87216d87216 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 8, Issue no: 1pAR87676r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR