Fit for Office?

The Perception of Female and Male Politicians by Dutch Voters

Authors

  • Rozemarijn E. van Dijk Author
  • Joop van Holsteyn Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5553/PLC/.000028

Keywords:

political underrepresentation, gender stereotypes, role incongruity, candidate evaluation, experimental vignette study

Abstract

The underrepresentation of women in politics is a worldwide phenomenon and the Netherlands fit the pattern: about 39% of the Dutch MPs are female. Based on social role incongruity theory, it is expected that female politicians are evaluated more negatively than male politicians since women do not fit the dominant male politician role. However, most research is conducted in the United States, that is, a candidate-centred system where individual characteristics play an important role. This article focuses on the party-centred parliamentary context in which we examine (1) whether gender stereotypes are present among citizens and (2) to what extent these stereotypes influence the evaluation of politicians. We do this by conducting an experimental vignette survey design. We find that at the mass level there is no difference between the evaluation of male and female politicians, although gender stereotypes are present.

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Author Biographies

  • Rozemarijn E. van Dijk

    Rozemarijn E. van Dijk is a PhD student at the department of political science at the University of 
    Antwerp, Belgium.

  • Joop van Holsteyn

    Joop J.M. van Holsteyn is Professor in Political Behaviour and Research Methods at Leiden University, the Netherlands.

Additional Files

Published

2025-03-12

How to Cite

van Dijk, R. E., & van Holsteyn, J. (2025). Fit for Office? The Perception of Female and Male Politicians by Dutch Voters. Politics of the Low Countries, 4(1), 75-99. https://doi.org/10.5553/PLC/.000028