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Ideology, Gender and Political Action: A Cross-National Survey

M. Kent Jennings and Barbara G. Farah

British Journal of Political Science, 1980, vol. 10, issue 2, 219-240

Abstract: Modern democratic theory stresses the need for citizens to be able to think in abstract ways about political objects and the political system. The underlying assumption is that those with a richer guiding conceptual framework participate more, monitor and process fresh stimuli in a more systematic fashion, and are less bewildered by a complicated political environment. These are generally conceded to be good qualities for the citizen and the state. To observe that women have a less developed sense of ideological sophistication is to conclude that their political lives are at least different, if not indeed more impoverished.

Date: 1980
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