Open Access

Women in local government: Moving in from the margins


Cite

Bacik, I. (2009). Women’s participation in politics. Retrieved from http://www.oireachtas.ie/documents/committees30thdail/jjusticeedwr/reports_2008/20091105.pdf [26 June 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Barry, U., & Conroy, P. (2012). Ireland: Untold story of the crisis – Gender equality and new inequalities. Dublin: TASC.Search in Google Scholar

Bratton, J., Sawchuk, P., Forshaw, C., Callinan, M., & Corbett, M. (2010). Work and organizational behaviour (2nd ed.). Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.10.1007/978-0-230-36602-2Search in Google Scholar

Buckley, F. (2013). Women and politics in Ireland: The road to sex quotas. Irish Political Studies, 28 (3), 341–59.10.1080/07907184.2013.818537Search in Google Scholar

Buckley, F., Mariani, M., McGing, C., & White, T. J. (forthcoming). Is local office a springboard for women to Dáil Éireann? Journal of Women, Politics and Policy.Search in Google Scholar

Calnan, D., & Sheahan, F. (2014, May 28). Labour candidate got death threats during EU campaign. Retrieved from http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/politics/labour-candidate-got-death-threats-during-eu-campaign-30309999.html [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Carey, M. (1994). Gender and power: Boys will be boys and so will girls. Irish Journal of Sociology, 4, 105–27.10.1177/079160359400400106Search in Google Scholar

Central Statistics Office. (2014). 2013 women and men in Ireland report. Retrieved from http://www.cso.ie/en/releasesandpublications/ep/pwamii/womenandmeninireland2013/ [28 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Childs, S., & Webb, P. (2012). Sex, gender and the Conservative Party: From iron lady to kitten heels. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.10.1057/9780230354227Search in Google Scholar

Connelly, J. (2011). The impact of public sector reform on gender equality in Ireland: A case study of Cork City Council. Administration, 59 (1), 39–68.Search in Google Scholar

Crossman, V. (1994). Local government in nineteenth-century Ireland. Belfast: Institute of Irish Studies.Search in Google Scholar

Davies, C. (1995). Gender and the professional predicament in nursing. Buckingham: Open University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Department of Justice and Equality. (2013). Towards gender parity in decision-making in Ireland. Retrieved from http://www.justice.ie/en/JELR/FINALTowards%20Gender%20Parity.pdf/Files/FINALTowards%20Gender%20Parity.pdf [5 March 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government. (2012). Putting people first: Action programme for effective local government. Dublin: Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government.Search in Google Scholar

Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government. (1996). Better local government: A programme for change. Dublin: Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government.Search in Google Scholar

Dowling, E. (2013, August 26). County manager Martina broke the mould to get top job. Retrieved from http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/county-manager-martina-broke-the-mould-to-get-top-job-29527625.html [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Duffy, R. (2014, May 16). Local election candidate subjected to ‘vile abuse’ for being pregnant. Retrieved from http://www.thejournal.ie/local-elections-lorraine-clifford-1468600-May2014/ [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Eurostat. (2015). Women earned on average 16% less than men in 2013 in the EU. Retrieved from https://static.rasset.ie/documents/news/eurostat-gender-pay-gap.pdf [28 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Fianna Fáil. (2013). Gender equality action plan. Dublin: Fianna Fáil.Search in Google Scholar

Fianna Fáil. (2015). Markievicz Commission report: Gender equality document. Dublin: Fianna Fáil.Search in Google Scholar

Galligan, Y. (1998). Women and politics in contemporary Ireland: From the margins to the mainstream. London: Pinter.Search in Google Scholar

Galligan, Y. (1999). Women in political, economic and social decision-making in Ireland. Midleton: Litho Press.Search in Google Scholar

Galligan, Y. (2010). Women in politics. In J. Coakley & M. Gallagher (Eds), Politics in the Republic of Ireland (5th ed.; pp. 263–91). London: Routledge.Search in Google Scholar

Gardiner, F. (1999). The impact of EU equality legislation on Irish women. In Y. Galligan, E. Ward & R. Wilford (Eds), Contesting politics: Women in Ireland, north and south (pp. 38–54). Oxford: Westview Press.Search in Google Scholar

Inter-Parliamentary Union. (2015). Women in national parliaments. Retrieved from http://www.ipu.org/wmn-e/classif.htm [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Jones, J. (2014, November 12). Second opinion: Inequality, abuse and the cost of childcare preserve the marriage bar. Retrieved from http://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/health-family/second-opinion-inequality-abuse-and-the-cost-of-childcare-preserve-the-marriage-bar-1.1989270 [25 March 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Kavanagh, A. (2014) Irish elections: Geography, facts and analyses. Retrieved from http://adriankavanaghelections.org/author/adriankavanagh/ [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Kenny, M., & Mackay, F. (2012). Less male, pale and stale? Women and the 2012 Scottish local government elections. Scottish Affairs, 80, 20–32.10.3366/scot.2012.0027Search in Google Scholar

Kittilson, M. C. (2006). Challenging parties, changing parliaments: Women and elected office in contemporary Western Europe. Columbus OH: Ohio State University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Krook, M. L. (2010). Why are fewer women than men elected? Gender and the dynamics of candidate selection. Political Studies Review, 8 (2), 155–68.10.1111/j.1478-9302.2009.00185.xSearch in Google Scholar

Lovenduski, J. (2005). Feminizing politics. Cambridge: Polity.Search in Google Scholar

Lynch, K., & Lyons, M. (2008). The gendered order of caring. In U. Barry (Ed.), Where are we now? New feminist perspectives on women in contemporary Ireland (pp. 163–83). Dublin: New Island Press.Search in Google Scholar

Manning, M. (1987). Women and the elections. In H. R. Penniman & B. Farrell (Eds), Ireland at the polls, 1981, 1982, and 1987: A study of four general elections (pp. 156–66). Durham: Duke University Press.Search in Google Scholar

McGing, C. (2014). Women’s roles in Irish political parties: Continuity and change. In C. Fischer & M. McAuliffe (Eds), Irish feminisms: Past, present and future (pp. 189–215). New York: Syracuse University Press.Search in Google Scholar

McKay, S. (2008). Introduction. In U. Barry (Ed.), Where are we now? New feminist perspectives on women in contemporary Ireland (pp. xi–xxii). Dublin: New Island Press.Search in Google Scholar

O’Connor, P. (1996). Organisational culture as a barrier to women’s promotion. The Economic and Social Review, 27 (3), 205–34.Search in Google Scholar

Opello, K. A. R. (2006). Gender quotas, parity reform, and political parties in France. New York: Lexington.Search in Google Scholar

Popham, H., Dowling, E., & Melia, P. (2013, August 26). Just 10pc of top local authority jobs held by women. Retrieved from http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/just-10pc-of-top-local-authority-jobs-held-by-women-29526747.html [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Power, A. (2014, April 2). Why Fianna Fáil isn’t meeting local election target on female candidates. Retrieved from http://www.irishtimes.com/news/politics/why-fianna-f%C3%A1il-isn-t-meeting-local-election-target-on-female-candidates-1.1746169 [27 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Power, A. (2015, May 27). Averil Power: Party’s reaction confirms that I made right decision. Retrieved from http://www.irishexaminer.com/viewpoints/analysis/averil-power-partys-reaction-confirms-that-i-made-right-decision-333100.html [26 June 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Ridgeway, C. L., & Correll, S. J. (2004). Motherhood as a status characteristic. Journal of Social Issues, 60 (4), 683–700.10.1111/j.0022-4537.2004.00380.xSearch in Google Scholar

R. L. W., & D. H. (2015, March 5). Daily chart: The glass-ceiling index. Retrieved from http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2015/03/daily-chart-1 [25 March 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Sheehan, A. (2015, 3 January). Working parents need to be earning €30,000 just to cover childcare costs. Retrieved from http://www.independent.ie/business/personal-finance/latest-news/working-parents-need-to-be-earning-30000-just-to-cover-childcare-costs-30879215.html [28 April 2015].Search in Google Scholar