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PPGCP062 - MÉTODO QUANTITATIVO APLICADO A ANÁLISE POLÍTICA - Turma: 02 (2013.1)

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  • 19/01/2014 11:27
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    Olá todos, bom ano novo a todos vcs.

    Primeiro quero dizer que não esqueci de vcs. Ainda me falta algum tempo para resolver algumas pendências até chegar nas pendências de vcs.

    Sei que todos estão muito ocupados com suas dissertações, mas não se esqueçam, com tb não esqueci, que temos um compromisso com vossos projetos da disciplina. Não tenho pressa para terminá-los, temos que fazê-los bem feitos para publicá-los.

    Finalmente, gostaria de saber como está a coleta de dados dos trabalhos que ficaram claros sobre o que pesqusiar. Principalemente o da Déborah e Paula que me parece depender de autorização de órgãos oficiais.

    Até breve.

    PS:

    Essa parte é para Sílvia. Lembrei do seu tema de dissertação e achei que os artigos abaixo podessem interessar.

    Artigo 1:

    The Gender Gap in Latin America: Contextual and Individual Influences on Gender and Political Participation

     Abstract (summary)

    While a substantial literature explores gender differences in participation in the United States, Commonwealth countries and Western Europe, little attention has been given to gender's impact on participation in the developing world. These countries have diverse experiences with gender politics: some have been leaders in suffrage reforms and equal rights, while, in others, divorce has only recently been legalized. This article examines the relationship between gender and participation in seventeen Latin American countries. Many core results from research in the developed world hold in Latin America as well. Surprisingly, however, there is no evidence that economic development provides an impetus for more equal levels of participation. Instead, the most important contextual factors are civil liberties and women's presence among the visible political elite. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

    Artigo 2:

    Enduring Gender Differences in Political Interest

    The Impact of Socialization and Political Dispositions

    1. Linda L.M. Bennett
      1. Wittenberg University
    2. Stephen Earl Bennett
      1. University of Cincinnati

    Abstract

    Although women now vote in national elections at the same rate as men, they are still less politically interested. Using regression analysis and two new scales to tap an orientation toward women's place in the public arena (Traditional Feminine Role Scale) and political interest (Political Apathy Scale), this article seeks to test the utility of the three standard explanations for women's political orientations (situational, structural, and sex-role socialization) in understanding the continuing "gender gap" in political interest. Other than education, situational and structural factors are found to have minimal explanatory capacity. Aside from education, political dispositions far outstrip situational and structural factors as predictors of attentiveness. Strongest support for the impact of socialization is provided by the different predictors of interest among different age groups. Among women under 30 education is less important as a predictor than is partisanship. Among women over 45, the Traditional Feminine Role Scale emerges as an increasingly important predictor as they age. We also report different motivations behind men's and women's decisions to vote or to abstain.



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