Women and Politics

Anticipating Madam President
Robert P. Watson and Ann Gordon, editors

Madam President? The question is not if, but rather when the United States will elect a female president—but that may be the only certainty involved in shattering this most visible    More >

The President's Cabinet: Gender, Power, and Representation
MaryAnne Borrelli

Are female office holders most acceptable when they most resemble men? Why has a woman never led the Department of the Treasury, or Defense, or Veterans Affairs? Reflecting on these and    More >

The Other Elites: Women, Politics, and Power in the Executive Branch
MaryAnne Borrelli and Janet M. Martin, editors

The Other Elites features original essays that provide important insights for both presidential studies and the study of women in US politics. The contributors to this innovative book have    More >

Sex as a Political Variable: Women as Candidates and Voters in U.S. Elections
Richard A. Seltzer, Jody Newman, and Melissa Vorhees Leighton

Though women constitute 52 percent of U.S. voters, as of October, 1996 only 10 percent of the members of Congress and one of the 50 state governors are women. Why, more than 75 years after    More >

Page 2 to 21 2 | <<