Dear colleagues,
We are inviting contributions for a special issue on the mechanisms behind
youth's underrepresentation in elected bodies. We are now seeking
submissions of extended abstracts for a workshop hosted by the University
of Ottawa in September 2022. Please find the full call below. Further info
and abstract submission: https://bit.ly/32qHivy
Kind regards
Jana Belschner, PhD
Post Doctoral Researcher
Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI),
Jekteviksbakken 31, 5006 Bergen
Tel. + 47 94985098
www.cmi.no
Call for Papers
Youth without representation: Discovering the mechanisms behind youth’s
underrepresentation in elected bodies
Organizers:
Dr. Daniel Stockemer (University of Ottawa), Dr. Devin Joshi (Singapore
Management University),
Dr. Aksel Sundström (Gothenburg University), Dr. Jana Belschner (Christian
Michelsen Institute),
Brittany Anlar (Rutgers University)
Twenty-five years ago, Pippa Norris (1997) aptly described that parliaments
are composed of middle-aged to senior men of the dominant ethnicity. Over
the past two decades, this picture has somewhat changed. In particular,
when it comes to gender and ethnicity, parliaments across the globe have
become more diverse. Unfortunately, the same diversification has not taken
place when it comes to young MPs. To highlight, worldwide, people under 30
represent only 2 percent of MPs, while they represent 50 percent of the
population (Magni-Berton & Panel 2020). By contrast, the average country
leader is 60 years old.
In this workshop, we will investigate the reasons for this continued
underrepresentation of youth in positions of elected office. In most
countries, there is a three-step process for getting elected: First,
declaring candidacy, i.e., becoming an aspirant. Second, winning a party
nomination in an uninominal electoral system or being placed on an
(electable) list position in a PR system. Third, being elected. In this
workshop, we want to decipher which of these steps in the funnel of
representation is (more) relevant in determining youth’s
underrepresentation in parliaments and other elected bodies.
Is the problem of youth representation a supply problem with not enough
young adults willing to run? Is there sustained discrimination in the
political system or within parties that blocks youths from candidacy or
from elections? Do voters systematically disadvantage younger candidates?
And how is the working of these factors conditioned by systemic
determinants like the electoral system, degree of democracy, as well as
candidacy and voting age requirements?
We seek answers to these questions and are interested in theoretical and
empirical papers (either in-depth case analyses, comparative, or large-N
studies) that try to establish why and how youth are (most) disadvantaged
in the funnel of representation.
We invite original contributions from scholars with a background in
political science, sociology, and related fields. We ask for submissions by
researchers at all career levels and we plan to build a special issue in a
reputable journal around the papers presented at the workshop.
Submissions
Deadline: February 28, 2022
Required: extended abstract (max. 400 words)
Notifications to be sent by April, 2022
Full paper submission by August 15, 2022 (6,000-8,000 words)
Format
Conference with personal attendance (online participation will be
possible)
Conference language: English.
Conference Place and Dates
Ottawa, School of Political Studies, Canada, September 13 and/or
September 14, 2022 (the APSA conference takes place between September 15
th and September 18th in Montreal, which is less than 2 hours by train
from Ottawa)
Costs covered: lunches and accommodation (2 nights)
For more information, visit the event website
https://yprrnworkshop.my.canva.site/, or email us at
youthpoliticalrep@gmail.com
<youthpoliticalrep@gmail.com?subject=Workshop%20Inquiry>
Dear colleagues,
We are inviting contributions for a special issue on the mechanisms behind
youth's underrepresentation in elected bodies. We are now seeking
submissions of extended abstracts for a workshop hosted by the University
of Ottawa in September 2022. Please find the full call below. Further info
and abstract submission: https://bit.ly/32qHivy
Kind regards
Jana Belschner, PhD
Post Doctoral Researcher
Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI),
Jekteviksbakken 31, 5006 Bergen
Tel. + 47 94985098
www.cmi.no
Call for Papers
Youth without representation: Discovering the mechanisms behind youth’s
underrepresentation in elected bodies
Organizers:
Dr. Daniel Stockemer (University of Ottawa), Dr. Devin Joshi (Singapore
Management University),
Dr. Aksel Sundström (Gothenburg University), Dr. Jana Belschner (Christian
Michelsen Institute),
Brittany Anlar (Rutgers University)
Twenty-five years ago, Pippa Norris (1997) aptly described that parliaments
are composed of middle-aged to senior men of the dominant ethnicity. Over
the past two decades, this picture has somewhat changed. In particular,
when it comes to gender and ethnicity, parliaments across the globe have
become more diverse. Unfortunately, the same diversification has not taken
place when it comes to young MPs. To highlight, worldwide, people under 30
represent only 2 percent of MPs, while they represent 50 percent of the
population (Magni-Berton & Panel 2020). By contrast, the average country
leader is 60 years old.
In this workshop, we will investigate the reasons for this continued
underrepresentation of youth in positions of elected office. In most
countries, there is a three-step process for getting elected: First,
declaring candidacy, i.e., becoming an aspirant. Second, winning a party
nomination in an uninominal electoral system or being placed on an
(electable) list position in a PR system. Third, being elected. In this
workshop, we want to decipher which of these steps in the funnel of
representation is (more) relevant in determining youth’s
underrepresentation in parliaments and other elected bodies.
Is the problem of youth representation a supply problem with not enough
young adults willing to run? Is there sustained discrimination in the
political system or within parties that blocks youths from candidacy or
from elections? Do voters systematically disadvantage younger candidates?
And how is the working of these factors conditioned by systemic
determinants like the electoral system, degree of democracy, as well as
candidacy and voting age requirements?
We seek answers to these questions and are interested in theoretical and
empirical papers (either in-depth case analyses, comparative, or large-N
studies) that try to establish why and how youth are (most) disadvantaged
in the funnel of representation.
We invite original contributions from scholars with a background in
political science, sociology, and related fields. We ask for submissions by
researchers at all career levels and we plan to build a special issue in a
reputable journal around the papers presented at the workshop.
Submissions
-
Deadline: February 28, 2022
-
Submissions to be uploaded HERE <https://bit.ly/3FaHuNM>
-
Required: extended abstract (max. 400 words)
-
Notifications to be sent by April, 2022
-
Full paper submission by August 15, 2022 (6,000-8,000 words)
Format
-
Conference with personal attendance (online participation will be
possible)
-
Conference language: English.
Conference Place and Dates
-
Ottawa, School of Political Studies, Canada, September 13 and/or
September 14, 2022 (the APSA conference takes place between September 15
th and September 18th in Montreal, which is less than 2 hours by train
from Ottawa)
-
Costs covered: lunches and accommodation (2 nights)
For more information, visit the event website
<https://yprrnworkshop.my.canva.site/>, or email us at
youthpoliticalrep@gmail.com
<youthpoliticalrep@gmail.com?subject=Workshop%20Inquiry>