TY - JOUR
T1 - Women and the Wall
T2 - Gender Attitudes and Political Engagement in Unified Germany
AU - Vries, Catherine E.De
AU - O’Brien, Diana Z.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Southern Political Science Association. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial intelligence technologies or similar technologies. Published by The University of Chicago Press for the Southern Political Science Association.
PY - 2026/1
Y1 - 2026/1
N2 - Women are generally less likely to express an interest in politics, join political organizations, and participate in political activities. Scholars posit that gender-(in)egalitarian attitudes are an important determinant of women’s political engagement. Yet, existing work finds mixed support for this claim. Using the German General Social Survey (1991–2016), we compare citizens’ attitudes toward gender across birth cohorts from East and West Germany. We find that cohorts socialized in the East hold more progressive gender attitudes than West Germans. We then show that traditional gender attitudes are negatively correlated with political interest and participation and that this effect is somewhat greater for women. Importantly, women who hold gender-egalitarian attitudes are nearly as politically engaged as men. We then assess the robustness of these results, show the findings hold in cross-national analyses, and explore an individual-level mechanism underlying our results. Together, our findings reveal an important barrier to political engagement.
AB - Women are generally less likely to express an interest in politics, join political organizations, and participate in political activities. Scholars posit that gender-(in)egalitarian attitudes are an important determinant of women’s political engagement. Yet, existing work finds mixed support for this claim. Using the German General Social Survey (1991–2016), we compare citizens’ attitudes toward gender across birth cohorts from East and West Germany. We find that cohorts socialized in the East hold more progressive gender attitudes than West Germans. We then show that traditional gender attitudes are negatively correlated with political interest and participation and that this effect is somewhat greater for women. Importantly, women who hold gender-egalitarian attitudes are nearly as politically engaged as men. We then assess the robustness of these results, show the findings hold in cross-national analyses, and explore an individual-level mechanism underlying our results. Together, our findings reveal an important barrier to political engagement.
KW - gender and political participation
KW - gender and politics
KW - gender-role attitudes
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016224532
U2 - 10.1086/734535
DO - 10.1086/734535
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105016224532
SN - 0022-3816
VL - 88
SP - 205
EP - 220
JO - Journal of Politics
JF - Journal of Politics
IS - 1
ER -