Description |
1 online resource (xvii, 125 pages) : illustrations |
Series |
Gender and politics, 2662-5822 |
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Gender and politics (Palgrave Macmillan (Firm)), 2662-5822
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Contents |
1. Introduction -- 2. Women arrive in the parliamentary workplace -- 3. Institutional norms and the cost of doing politics -- 4. The arrival of #MeToo breaks the silence -- 5. Trying to turn parliament into a model workplace: UK, Canada, New Zealand -- 6. Australia catches up and what hope for the future? |
Summary |
This open access book shows how the #MeToo movement and revelations of sexual harassment and bullying have spurred on reform of the parliamentary workplace in four Westminster countries -- Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the UK. Long-standing conventions included extreme power imbalances between parliamentarians and staff and a lack of professionalised employment practices. Codes of conduct and independent complaints bodies were resisted on grounds of parliamentary privilege: the ballot box was supposedly the best means of holding parliamentarians accountable for their conduct. The taken-for-granted status of adversarial politics and its silencing effects also rendered gendered mistreatment invisible. The authors examine the institutional backdrop and the different trajectories of reform in the four countries, with most detail on the dramatic developments in Australia after angry women marched on parliament houses in 2021. They show how the different parliaments have responded to escalating evidence of misconduct, the role of policy borrowing, and the possibilities of lasting institutional change |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed April 18, 2024) |
Subject |
Legislative bodies -- Reform.
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Legislative bodies -- Privileges and immunities.
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Parliamentary practice.
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Bullying in the workplace.
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Legislative bodies -- Ethics.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Maley, Maria, author
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ISBN |
9783031483288 |
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3031483286 |
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