The implementation of quotas : European experiences

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Bibliographic Information

The implementation of quotas : European experiences

edited by Julie Ballington and Francesca Binda

(Quota report series, No. 4)

International IDEA, c2005

Other Title

European experiences

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Note

"This report was complied from the findings and case studies presented at an International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance and Central and East European Network for Gender Issues Workshop held on 22-23 October 2004, in Budapest, Hungary."

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This report examines women's political representation in Europe. Although the overall representation of women in European Parliaments (including the Commonwealth of Independent States' nations) stands at approximately 18 percent, the differences among the many countries are staggering; from a low of three percent in Kyrgyzstan to a high of 45 percent in Sweden. In all of Europe, only eight countries have legislated quotas at the national or sub-national level. In 27 countries, political parties have voluntarily adopted some form of quotas. Gender quotas are increasingly viewed as an important policy measure for boosting women's access to decision-making bodies throughout the world. The proponents of quotas in many European countries face an unusual dilemma compared to other regions -- rejection and scepticism based on previous experience with quotas. In many communist states of the 20th Century, quotas were employed as a way of paying lip-service to equality declarations made by state-sponsored socialism. Thus in several, modern European democracies of the 21st Century, quotas are not regarded as positive measures but rather negative reminders of non-democratic practices. This report looks in depth at this particular impediment and compares strategies and ways of overcoming the stereotypes. There are 11 country case studies included in the report: Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Estonia, Hungary, Lithuania, Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Serbia and Montenegro and Slovenia.

Table of Contents

  • Quota Systems: An Overview of Global Trends and Regional Analysis
  • Implementing Quotas: Legal Reform and Enforcement
  • Political Party Quotas: International and Regional Co-operation
  • Introducing Quotas: Discourses and Lobbying Strategies Used by the Women's Movement
  • The Role of the International Community and International Instruments
  • Conclusion.

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