The effect of hegemonic masculinity in the proportion of women in post-communist parliaments: a case study of Estonia and Poland
Date
2014
Authors
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Publisher
Tartu Ülikool
Abstract
The underrepresentation of women in national parliaments is a phenomenon that
plagues much of the world, with the Baltic Sea Region being no exception. Two
countries, Estonia and Poland, are chosen for comparative analysis in this paper, as they
possess different cultures and histories, but have similar results in regards to female
representation at a national level. The comparison provides insight into the situation
women face in politics in two post-communist states in Central and Eastern Europe.
This paper will examine the trends in the proportion of female representatives in Poland
and Estonia’s national parliaments in the transition from communism to democracy and
post-transition periods. The work seeks to conceptualize why women in Poland and
Estonia continue to be grossly underrepresented in the upper echelons of power by
employing R.W. Connell’s concept of hegemonic masculinity. Hegemonic masculinity
entails the cultural force that both dominates and subordinates femininity as well as
other masculinities, thus resulting in low proportions of women in the national
parliaments of the new countries examined. Three time periods are developed for a
fuller analysis of changes in the amount of women seated in the upper echelons of
power: the communist period, the transition period, 1989-2004, and the post-transition
period, 2004-2012. The work notes the changes in gender equality policies in each
country after the accession to the European Union in 2004 and the possibilities of
greater gender equality in each state.