Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T23:15:37.693Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Regime Support and Gender Quotas in Autocracies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2023

YUREE NOH*
Affiliation:
Rhode Island College, United States
SHARAN GREWAL*
Affiliation:
William & Mary, United States
M. TAHIR KILAVUZ*
Affiliation:
Marmara University, Turkey, and Harvard University, United States
*
Yuree Noh, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Rhode Island College, United States, [email protected].
Sharan Grewal, Assistant Professor, Government Department, William & Mary, United States; and Nonresident Fellow, Brookings Institution, United States, [email protected].
M. Tahir Kilavuz, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and International Relations, Marmara University, Turkey, and Visiting Fellow, Middle East Initiative, Harvard University, United States, [email protected].
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Gender quotas are increasingly being adopted by autocrats in part to legitimize their rule. Yet, even in autocracies, these quotas increase women’s political representation. It thus stands to reason that public support for gender quotas in autocracies might be shaped by this trade-off between advancing women’s rights and granting the regime legitimacy. All else equal, regime opponents should be less supportive of gender quotas in autocracies, wary of legitimizing the regime. We uncover evidence of this proposition in an analysis of region-wide Arab Barometer surveys and a survey experiment in Algeria. We also find that evaluations of this trade-off are conditioned by other demographics, with women, gender egalitarians, and Islamists remaining more consistent in their support for/opposition to gender quotas regardless of regime gains. Overall, our findings suggest that gender quotas in autocracies are viewed through a political lens, creating a potential backlash toward women’s empowerment.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association

INTRODUCTION

Electoral quotas by gender have been adopted by over 130 countries (Hughes et al. Reference Hughes, Paxton, Clayton and Zetterberg2019), becoming the main determinant of female legislative representation around the world (Jones Reference Jones2009; Krook Reference Krook2009; Tripp and Kang Reference Tripp and Kang2008). Gender quotas have been found to not only increase women’s descriptive representation, but also substantively shape policies in favor of the rights of women (Clayton Reference Clayton2021; Clayton and Zetterberg Reference Clayton and Zetterberg2018). Quotas have also been shown to have a positive impact on women’s symbolic representation, inspiring women to run for and win public offices (Bhavnani Reference Bhavnani2009; Nanes Reference Nanes2015) and improving the public’s perception of women in politics (Ben Shitrit Reference Ben Shitrit2016).

Gender quotas have been adopted not just by democracies, but also by autocracies (Hughes, Krook, and Paxton Reference Hughes, Krook and Paxton2015). While occasionally motivated by gender egalitarianism and women’s rights activism, autocrats’ calculations for adopting gender quotas are often more cynical: an attempt to garner international and domestic legitimacy (Bjarnegård and Zetterberg Reference Bjarnegård and Zetterberg2022; Bush Reference Bush2011; Donno, Fox, and Kaasik Reference Donno, Fox and Kaasik2022; Tripp Reference Tripp2019). Indeed, recent scholarship finds that autocrats often succeed in boosting their international reputations by adopting gender quotas (Bush and Zetterberg Reference Bush and Zetterberg2020).

Despite the motivations for their adoption, gender quotas even outside of democracies still produce a variety of benefits for women—descriptive, substantive, and symbolic (Dahlerup Reference Dahlerup2013). Therefore, unlike in democracies, gender quotas in autocracies generate a unique trade-off: advancing gender equality, but also legitimizing dictatorship. Does this trade-off in turn shape public support for gender quotas in autocracies? Are regime opponents less supportive of gender quotas, hesitant to grant the regime legitimacy? Or, do the potential benefits of empowering women outweigh these legitimacy costs?

In this article, we explore this trade-off by examining public opinion in the Arab world, a region where the trade-off is expected to be particularly pronounced. With the region historically having some of the worst records on women’s rights, quotas have had a dramatic effect on boosting female political representation (Kang Reference Kang2009). At the same time, such gender-based reforms grant Arab dictators a progressive reputation both domestically and internationally, creating a stark contrast to the conservative Islamists widely viewed as their alternative (Tripp Reference Tripp2019). Accordingly, both the gains to women and to the regime are thought to be especially strong in the Arab world.

We pursue a two-pronged approach to evaluate Arab public opinion toward the autocratic gender quota trade-off. We first present a region-wide analysis using representative surveys from the Arab Barometer. We show that regime support/opposition is a major predictor of attitudes toward gender quotas in almost every country surveyed. Regime supporters are significantly more supportive of quotas than opponents, even when controlling for demographic and attitudinal variables that might otherwise confound this analysis. At the same time, we also find that the importance of regime support/opposition varies by subgroups, with the trade-off seemingly less salient for women and gender-egalitarian respondents, who remain consistently supportive of quotas regardless of their attitudes toward the regime. These groups thus appear to evaluate the trade-off differently, more highly valuing the gains to women.

Having established the broad patterns, we then move to experimentally test the mechanism: that regime supporters are more supportive of gender quotas because the quotas grant the regime legitimacy. We field an original survey in Algeria during the 2019–20 Hirak protests—a context of mass frustration with the regime where we would expect concerns over regime legitimacy to be highly salient, and thus for our mechanism to be especially clear. Embedded in the survey was an experiment that primed respondents to think of who gained from the gender quotas under President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (r. 1999–2019): women, the regime, or both, compelling respondents to evaluate the trade-off.

The experiment uncovers two major findings. First, reminding Algerians that the regime gained legitimacy from quotas produced a divergent reaction from regime supporters and opponents, with supporters becoming significantly more supportive of quotas. Regime opponents, by contrast, were affected by the trade-off, becoming significantly more supportive of quotas when primed that women gained, but not when primed that the regime also gained. For regime opponents, the gains to women thus did not outweigh the gains to the regime. Second, the experiment also reveals support for our subgroup hypotheses. Women, gender egalitarians, and Islamists were less moved by the trade-off, remaining consistently supportive/opposed to quotas regardless of who gained.

These results hold several important implications for the study of women’s rights in Arab autocracies and beyond. First, we theorize and empirically validate a potential source of backlash to gender quotas in dictatorships. Our findings suggest that people view quotas through a political lens, conscious of their dictator’s attempts to “genderwash” their image. Populations that might otherwise support gender quotas are wary of doing so when they might legitimize a dictator. Popular support for such gender-based reforms may thus be low, especially among regime opponents. In this way, our research adds to the literature on how quotas may cause a backlash against women’s empowerment (e.g., Batista Pereira and Porto Reference Batista Pereira and Porto2020; Berry, Bouka, and Kamuru Reference Berry, Bouka and Kamuru2020; Clayton Reference Clayton2015; Meier Reference Meier2008; Zetterberg Reference Zetterberg2009).

In turn, this dampened public support for quotas in autocracies may undermine their durability and effectiveness. Without widespread public buy-in into quotas, they may prove brittle, less likely to withstand a regime transition. In Algeria, for instance, once Bouteflika was toppled, the gender quotas were watered down, cutting women’s representation from 26% to 8% (Marwane Reference Marwane2021). If quotas become tainted by a particular dictator, they may not outlast his rule. More generally, quotas are less effective in producing policy reforms when they lack public support (Clayton Reference Clayton2021, 245).

At the same time, our results suggest that dictators might succeed in coopting certain segments of the population through gender quotas. In our survey, women and gender egalitarian respondents tended to support these reforms regardless of the potential regime gains. Prioritizing women’s empowerment, these groups may fear that if the regime falls, the quotas might fall as well. In the Arab world, for instance, secular feminists often feared the loss of women’s rights if Islamists were to come to power (Tripp Reference Tripp2019). Our survey results confirm that these segments of society might on average be more susceptible to cooptation by progressive autocrats. For regimes, these segments may also be particularly important for staying in power. Chenoweth and Marks (Reference Chenoweth and Marks2022) argue that having more women on the front lines makes revolutions significantly more likely to succeed. For dictators, then, coopting women through gender quotas may have significant benefits for helping them stay in power and weather mass uprisings.

THE GENDER QUOTA TRADE-OFF

Existing literature suggests that when dictators adopt gender-based reforms, they often do so for reasons unrelated to empowering women.Footnote 1 Gender quotas in particular have been a popular choice for dictators as they provide numerous benefits yet carry minimal risk. Scholars have shown that often, regimes simply create additional seats for women without hurting male incumbents (Bjarnegård and Zetterberg Reference Bjarnegård and Zetterberg2016; Goetz Reference Goetz2002; Tripp Reference Tripp2022). Moreover, quotas strengthen the dictator’s international and domestic legitimacy.

In the wake of the global push toward women’s rights such as the 1995 Beijing World Conference on Women, women’s rights promotion has become an international norm (Towns Reference Towns2010). To signal norm compliance, authoritarian regimes have adopted gender-based reforms to gain international legitimacy and foreign support. Scholars find that autocrats who receive Western aid are more likely to adopt quotas (Bush Reference Bush2011; Donno, Fox, and Kaasik Reference Donno, Fox and Kaasik2022; Edgell Reference Edgell2017; Welbourne Reference Welbourne2010) and that the adoption is associated with a boost to their international reputations (Bush and Zetterberg Reference Bush and Zetterberg2020). Previous research also finds that quota adoption helps autocrats fend off international pressure to democratize, aiding authoritarian survival (Abou-Zeid Reference Abou-Zeid and Dahlerup2006; Bjarnegård and Zetterberg Reference Bjarnegård and Zetterberg2022).

In addition to increasing international prestige, gender reforms strengthen the dictator’s domestic prospects. First of all, gender quotas help dictators to coopt women and women’s rights activists, increasing their domestic support (Valdini Reference Valdini2019) and the perceived legitimacy of their institutions (Kao et al. Reference Kao, Lust, Shalaby and Weiss2023). Moreover, reforms like gender quotas are often unfairly designed to strengthen the dictator’s grip on power (e.g., Adams Reference Adams2007; Donno and Kreft Reference Donno and Kreft2019; Tripp and Kang Reference Tripp and Kang2008). For example, Bjarnegård and Zetterberg (Reference Bjarnegård and Zetterberg2016) show how quotas benefit the ruling party by facilitating the selection of loyalist women to the reserved seats. Finally, female legislators in autocracies tend to be more loyal than male members to their parties, further solidifying the ruling party (Clayton and Zetterberg Reference Clayton and Zetterberg2021).

In the Arab world in particular, adopting gender reforms appears to reward dictators with a progressive reputation, creating a contrast with the conservative Islamists who are often their primary opponents. Tripp (Reference Tripp2019) documents how dictators in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia exploited this contrast by strategically promoting women’s rights, winning support at home and abroad. In Tunisia, the regime “demanded women’s unconditional support and enlistment in the anti-Islamist struggle” in return for protection of women’s rights (Yacoubi Reference Yacoubi2016, 258). In Morocco, female legislators elected through quotas have attributed their success “thanks to the young King” (Sater Reference Sater2007, 729). Likewise, Arab dictators across the region have adopted quotas to gain financial and moral support from the West (Abou-Zeid Reference Abou-Zeid and Dahlerup2006; David and Nanes Reference David and Nanes2011; Sater Reference Sater2007). Even Egypt’s brutal military dictator, Abdelfattah al-Sisi, has won praise from Western audiences for his adoption of gender quotas in 2020, with one prominent American journalist writing that Sisi is a “friendly” autocrat, under whose rule “[w]omen’s rights have advanced, too, with women now mandated to hold 25 percent of the seats in parliament” (Ignatius Reference Ignatius2021).

Despite the strategic motives for adoption, gender quotas in authoritarian regimes still often lead to measurable gains in women’s empowerment beyond descriptive representation (Bauer Reference Bauer2012).Footnote 2 For instance, quota-elected female representatives are more likely to be responsive to female constituents’ demands for services (Benstead Reference Benstead2016). Gender quotas can also lead to increased female representation in more prestigious committees in parliaments (Shalaby and Elimam Reference Shalaby and Elimam2020) and generate a significant symbolic effect changing entrenched attitudes toward women and increasing the acceptability of women in politics (Ben Shitrit Reference Ben Shitrit2016). Moreover, quotas lead to women being more respected in the community by gaining greater autonomy in family decision-making, eventually leading to increased female political engagement (Burnet Reference Burnet2011). Accordingly, gender quotas in autocracies produce a unique trade-off: empowering women, but at the same time, helping to legitimize dictatorship.

How does this trade-off affect the public’s attitudes toward gender quotas? There are at least two reasons to worry about a backlash. First, even in democracies, quotas sometimes produce a negative impact on women’s empowerment (e.g., Batista Pereira and Porto Reference Batista Pereira and Porto2020; Brulé Reference Brulé2020; Htun, Lacalle, and Micozzi Reference Htun, Lacalle and Micozzi2013). Second, if imposed from above by a dictator, there is more reason to suspect a backlash against policies that may not reflect the will of the public. If people perceive the quota as stemming from some ulterior motive, such as an attempt to genderwash, an otherwise positive reform may become tainted in their eyes.

Interviews suggest that Arabs are well aware of this trade-off. Tunisian parliamentarian Hela Omrane, reflecting on Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s adoption of gender quotas in 2009, noted that “it was only a PR exercise for the regime” (quoted in Gouvy Reference Gouvy2020). “The promotion of women’s rights was instrumentalized to legitimize the system [and] stifle dissent,” noted a Tunisian activist (quoted in Gray Reference Gray2012, 290). Similarly, Egyptian activist Noralla (Reference Noralla2022) argues that Sisi’s “‘feminist-washing’ propaganda” is simply designed “to cover up the regime’s widespread human rights abuses.” A Jordanian MP likewise told Bush and Jamal (Reference Bush and Jamal2015, 38) that “the regime just takes the quota as a form of make-up to put on the face of the regime […] It’s just a façade because the international community cares about it.”

In our own research, interviewees were cognizant not only of how the regime gained legitimacy, but even how they strategically used the quotas for their own benefit. Opposition politicians interviewed in Algeria, for instance, noted that the quotas uniquely helped the regime, as it alone enjoyed the resources to recruit qualified female candidates.Footnote 3 An Algerian women’s rights activist observed that women elected through quotas would “go on TV and say whatever they were told to say by the [regime party’s] leadership…They were pretty much scapegoats.”Footnote 4 Other Algerian activists told Lorch and Bunk (Reference Lorch and Bunk2016, 14) that women elected through quotas for regime parties tended to focus on defending the party line. The abundance of qualitative evidence thus suggests that at least some citizens are aware of their dictator’s genderwashing schemes. If so, we would expect regime support/opposition to be a major predictor of support for gender quotas, with regime supporters eager to grant the regime legitimacy, and opponents wary of doing so.

H1: All else equal, regime supporters are more supportive of gender quotas than regime opponents, because quotas grant the regime legitimacy.

Bush and Jamal (Reference Bush and Jamal2015) provide initial support for this hypothesis, finding in Jordan that regime opponents became less supportive of women’s representation when primed that U.S.-funded organizations and domestic religious leaders supported gender quotas. However, the authors acknowledge that they cannot conclusively determine whether support decreased because they opposed the legitimacy it would grant the regime or because they were simply more opposed to those particular endorsers.Footnote 5

In addition to explicitly priming regime legitimacy, it is also worth explicitly priming the gains to women, examining directly the trade-off produced through gender quotas in autocracies. We expect that while regime opponents will become more supportive of quotas when primed only about the gains to women, they will not when also primed about the gains to the regime. If our expectations are validated, they would demonstrate the strong influence that the trade-off plays in shaping public opinion.

Mitigating Factors

At the same time, we also expect evaluations of the gender quota trade-off to be mitigated or conditioned by a number of other factors. For one, prior research identifies a visible gender gap: women, compared to men, are more likely to support various gender equality policies (Elder and Green Reference Elder and Green2012; Morgan and Buice Reference Morgan and Buice2013) such as gender quotas (Barnes and Córdova Reference Barnes and Córdova2016; Beauregard Reference Beauregard2018; Gidengil Reference Gidengil1996; Keenan and McElroy Reference Keenan and McElroy2016). One possible explanation is that policies like gender quotas by nature are more favorable toward women themselves (Deckman and McTeague Reference Deckman and McTeague2015; Meltzer and Richard Reference Meltzer and Richard1981). Scholars have also argued that there are inherent differences and diverging socialization experiences between the sexes, generating different political preferences for women and men (Gilligan Reference Gilligan1982). Another explanation is men’s discontent against the advancement of women; men may see women as competition and threats to their traditional status. Morgan and Buice (Reference Morgan and Buice2013) argue that status discontent is a key factor that leads to backlash against female advancement by men who feel threatened by women’s progress. They find that men, especially those with relatively lower status, are less likely to be supportive of women in politics. Building off of this literature on the gender gap, we hypothesize that women, compared with men, will be more consistently supportive of gender quotas, even when it may grant the regime legitimacy.

H2: Women are more consistently supportive of quotas, regardless of regime gains.

Similarly, we expect individual-level gender egalitarian attitudes to influence evaluations of the authoritarian gender quota trade-off. Studies have shown that gender inegalitarianism is associated with bias against female politicians, including those elected through quotas (Blackman and Jackson Reference Blackman and Jackson2019). Gender egalitarian values are also linked to support for gender equality policies such as equal pay (Cassese, Barnes, and Branton Reference Cassese, Barnes and Branton2015) and electoral gender quotas (Barnes and Córdova Reference Barnes and Córdova2016). Thus, we expect respondents with more gender egalitarian attitudes to consistently support quotas and consider the trade-off less relevant.

H3: Gender egalitarian respondents are more consistently supportive of quotas, regardless of regime gains.

Across the Arab world, scholars have shown that Islamist movements and parties are the most vocal critics of gender quotas (e.g., Tripp Reference Tripp2019). Islamists, such as the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hassan al-Banna, have historically prioritized women’s family roles above others. Al-Banna ([1947] Reference Al-Banna2006, 147) advocated for male and female students to be segregated, for boys’ curricula to be made distinct from girls’, for women to be instructed in proper dress, and be encouraged to marry and procreate. Ben Shitrit (Reference Ben Shitrit2016) extensively documents how three Islamist parties today—Hamas in Palestine, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, and the Islamic Movement in Israel—have been the most critical opponents of legislated gender quotas, which they treat as “foreign.” The Palestinian Islamist movement, Hamas, publicly opposed the quota before its adoption in 2005. One leader cited a Hadith from Sahih al-Bukhari (4425): “a people that places their affairs at the hand of a woman will never prosper” (Lahlouh Reference Lahlouh2010). Similarly, the Islamic Constitutional Movement, the political wing of the Kuwaiti Muslim Brotherhood, opposed gender quotas because they would be “against Islamic principles” and not necessarily produce benefits for women.Footnote 6 In Jordan, the Islamic Action Front likewise condemned the quotas, arguing they were unconstitutional and would not empower women (al-Batayneh, quoted in David and Nanes Reference David and Nanes2011). In Algeria, even 5 years after quota adoption, several Islamist parties refused to print their female candidates’ faces on campaign posters. Given this ideological opposition, we expect Islamists’ attitudes to be consistently opposed to quotas, even if they support the regime.

H4: Islamists are more consistently opposed to quotas, regardless of regime gains.

We test these hypotheses in two ways. We first establish region-wide correlations using survey data from the Arab Barometer. We show that throughout the region, regime support/opposition powerfully shapes attitudes toward quotas, and that this varies in line with our secondary hypotheses. Second, we move to test the mechanism using an original survey experiment in Algeria. The experiment shows how the gender quota trade-off has a causal effect shaping support for quotas and that this effect is less salient for our theorized subgroups.

ARAB BAROMETER

We first explore survey data from the Arab Barometer, which has conducted nationally representative face-to-face surveys across the region. In Wave 5, the Arab Barometer featured a new question examining support for gender quotas: “Some people think that in order to achieve fairer representation, a certain percentage of elected positions should be set aside for women. To what extent do you agree with this statement?” Respondents could answer on a 4-point scale from strongly agree or strongly disagree (see Supplementary Figure A.1).

Wave 5 of the Arab Barometer was conducted in 12 countries in 2018–19. We examine whether support for quotas varies by support for the regime, both pooling across all countries and showing each individually. Eight of the 12 countries had gender quotas in place at the time of the survey and in all eight, the regime in power was the one that had introduced the current version of those quotas (see Supplementary Table A.1). Our theory should apply most readily to these eight cases, where populations should associate the current quota with the regime. However, even in the four countries without quotas at the time (Egypt, Kuwait, Lebanon, and Yemen), were they to introduce one, the current regime would reap the benefits, as Egypt’s subsequent adoption of quotas in 2020 showed. Thus, calculations of regime support/opposition should still be salient here. Moreover, the countries without quotas also help us rule out an alternative explanation that regime supporters might just be more in favor of all regime policies. Instead, since quotas were not a regime policy, respondents may be thinking about who would gain from such a policy. Our main results below accordingly pool all countries (Figure 1), but we show in Supplementary Figure A.2 that results hold in both the countries with and without quotas.

Figure 1. Predicted Probabilities for Support for Quota

Note: Figures created from Supplementary Table A.2.

Our theory might also apply less well to the three flawed democracies (Lebanon, Iraq, and Tunisia), compared with autocracies. However, each of these countries around the time of the survey (2018–19) saw mass protests calling for the “fall of the regime” (isqat an-nizam), suggesting that populations still viewed politics in a regime-opposition lens. We, therefore, continue to include these countries in the analysis, though we show in Supplementary Figure A.3 that results are still significant, yet slightly weaker in the three flawed democracies, a topic we revisit in the conclusion.

To capture support for the regime, we create a government performance index based on four questions that measure citizens’ evaluations of the government in four issue areas: creating employment opportunities, narrowing the gap between rich and poor, providing security, and keeping prices down. The composite forms our primary measure of support for the regime. For robustness checks, we also examine two other independent variables: general satisfaction with the government, and agreement that “Citizens must support the government’s decisions, even if they disagree with them.” Both of these alternative independent variables produce similar results.Footnote 7

We examine the relationship between regime support and support for gender quotas while controlling for numerous demographic and attitudinal variables. Following the literature on the link between social structural indicators and female political representation (e.g., Norris Reference Norris1987), we control for age, gender, education, unemployment, marriage, and having children. We also control for several attitudinal variables that might correlate with regime support and/or support for quotas, such as generalized trust, interest in politics, gender egalitarianism, and support for Islamism.Footnote 8 In the pooled analysis, we also control for Polity score, regime type (monarchy vs. republic), the presence of quotas in each country at the time of the survey, and country fixed effects.

Figure 1 presents the results pooled across the region (left) and then by individual country (right). Region-wide, there is a significant, positive correlation between evaluations of government performance and support for quotas. In line with H1, regime supporters are significantly more likely to support quotas than regime opponents. The right-hand side of the plot shows the predicted support for each country in the analysis. We see the same significant result in 10 of 12 countries, with only Iraq and Palestine showing no relationship. The correlations are particularly strong in Algeria and Kuwait, where regime support moves respondents from roughly opposing to supporting the quotas (from 2 to 3, respectively, on the response scale). These results from the Arab Barometer thus provide strong support for H1: regime support/opposition is a major determinant of support for quotas.

Having established the overall association, we now turn to our secondary hypotheses (H2–H4), exploring whether regime support/opposition matters less for women, gender egalitarians, and Islamists. Figure 2 plots each interaction.

Figure 2. Predicted Probabilities for Support for Quota: Subgroup Analysis

Note: Figures created from models 1–3 in Supplementary Table A.3.

We first examine how gender shapes support for quotas (H2). As seen in the plot on the left, women (gray) are on average more supportive of gender quotas than men (black), as expected. Notably, women’s support for quotas only modestly changes by regime support. On the other hand, the slope of the effect for men is significantly greater: their support for quotas is considerably more moved by their attitudes toward the regime ( $ p<0.05 $ ). In short, while women are more supportive of quotas across the board, men tend to be more shaped by the regime trade-off.

We see a similar story when interacting regime support with gender egalitarianism (H3), using an index based on questions about women’s role in society.Footnote 9 As seen in the middle plot, gender egalitarian respondents (top line) support quotas across the board: their line is flat, unshaped by their attitudes toward the regime. However, among the most gender inegalitarian respondents (bottom line), regime support matters to a much greater extent, considerably shaping their support for the quotas. In line with H3, gender inegalitarian respondents are more likely to be influenced by the regime trade-off ( $ p<0.001 $ ).

Finally, the plot on the right plots the Islamism interaction (H4). Here, we use a question about whether respondents prefer a religious or nonreligious party. Although not significant, respondents who prefer a religious party (gray) are leaning less supportive of gender quotas. They are also slightly, but not significantly, less moved by regime support/opposition, more consistently opposing quotas across the board.

According to the results by country (Supplementary Tables A.5), the interaction between Islamism and regime support is significant in our hypothesized direction only in Algeria, where Islamists consistently oppose quotas, while non-Islamists are shaped by their degree of support for the regime. The interaction is not statistically significant elsewhere. One explanation could be that many of the pro-regime Islamist parties elsewhere, such as (at the time) Morocco’s PJD and Tunisia’s Ennahda, had come to embrace gender quotas, strategically using them to win seats in parliament. Ben Shitrit (Reference Ben Shitrit2016), for instance, notes that although Islamists initially viewed quotas as “foreign,” some later justified their fielding of women as an “Islamic” decision. Those elite cues might be shaping their followers’ views to become more supportive of gender quotas. In short, this recent variation in Islamist party behavior across the region may be undercutting support for this particular hypothesis.

Overall, our analysis from the Arab Barometer uncovers significant support for a gender quota trade-off. Across almost every country in the region, regime support/opposition strongly correlates with support for gender quotas, in line with the trade-off quotas pose in autocracies. Moreover, we find that the trade-off matters less among women and gender egalitarian respondents, who tend to support quotas across the board.

Why does regime support/opposition shape attitudes toward gender quotas? This correlation is somewhat puzzling, as we might expect the opposition in authoritarian contexts to be more supportive of reforms, and particularly of progressive ones. We theorize that respondents are cognizant that the regime will gain from gender quotas, leading regime supporters to support quotas, and opponents to oppose them. To test if that mechanism might indeed be driving the results, we now turn to a survey experiment conducted in Algeria.

ALGERIA SURVEY EXPERIMENT

Algeria is a useful venue for testing the mechanism for several reasons. First, in the Arab Barometer analysis, Algeria was the country where the relationship between regime support and gender quotas was strongest (see Figure 1). Where the relationship is strongest, the mechanism should be clearest (Seawright and Gerring Reference Seawright and Gerring2008).

Qualitative, contextual knowledge helps us understand why the relationship might have been strongest in Algeria. Women’s issues have historically been a salient part of the country’s public discourse. Algerian women were active participants in the War of Independence. While the postcolonial regime initially placed women’s rights issues on the back burner (Lazreg Reference Lazreg1990), women’s activism reemerged in the 1980s in response to regressive laws like the 1984 Family Code. During the Algerian Civil War, activists organized large demonstrations demanding an end to violence against women, who were often the targets (Moghadam Reference Moghadam2001; Turshen Reference Turshen2002).

More recently, Algeria has been among the Arab countries that have adopted gender quotas and where those quotas have considerably advanced women’s representation. In 2011, former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika introduced a gender quota for legislative elections mandating women comprise approximately 30% of the candidates on parliamentary lists.Footnote 10 Subsequently, Algeria achieved one of the highest rates of female legislative representation in the Arab world, between 25% and 31% (second only to Tunisia). Previously, the rate had only been 6%–8%. Thus, the gains to women’s representation, as a result of the quota adoption, have been particularly salient in Algeria.

In addition, bringing more women into Algeria’s political sphere had substantive and symbolic effects. Most notably, in 2015, the parliament amended the family code to criminalize domestic violence and sexual harassment. Female MPs also played a key role in the 2016 constitutional reform which included an article promoting gender equality in the labor market (Article 36). While these legislative and constitutional amendments were part of Bouteflika’s broader genderwashing strategy, the new female MPs helped push them through and detail the specifics. Moreover, male politicians were increasingly working together with female MPs and important parliamentary committees became more likely to include women. The increased presence of female politicians as a result of quotas likely also transformed attitudes and made people more accepting of women in politics. While the gender quotas did not elevate women into the highest echelons of power (Hamadouche Reference Hamadouche2016), they did produce a wide variety of benefits for Algerian women.

On the other hand, a second reason why the relationship may have been strongest in Algeria is that the gains to the regime have also been highly salient. The regime adopted the gender quota, among other reforms, in the wake of the 2011 Arab Spring protests in an effort to demonstrate Bouteflika’s willingness to make political reforms. While the quota increased women’s descriptive representation, the new female MPs tended to come from the ruling coalition, and, as mentioned above, often served as regime mouthpieces.

Moreover, the adoption of the gender quota brought Bouteflika considerable praise, increasing the regime’s legitimacy. Domestically, Nadia Aït Zaï, the founder of the women’s rights group Centre d’Information et de Documentation sur les Droits de l’Enfant et de la Femme (CIDDEF), praised Bouteflika for his “courage” in implementing gender quotas.Footnote 11 “This is a victory” for Algerian women, she said.Footnote 12 This praise was no surprise since Aït Zaï acknowledged they had worked with the president to make this happen.Footnote 13 Nouria Hafsi, the secretary-general of the Union Nationale des Femmes Algériennes (UNFA), endorsed Bouteflika for reelection in 2014, saying “we are convinced that Bouteflika will do everything to realize the rights of women, as he has always done.”Footnote 14

Internationally, Reuters in 2012 hailed Bouteflika as the Arab world’s “new trailblazer for women in politics,” noting he was praised by both United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for adopting the quota (Ahmed Reference Ahmed2012). UN Women’s executive director Michelle Bachelet likewise commended him, calling the quotas “a welcome step in Algeria’s progress toward democratic reform and gender equality” (UN Women 2012; UNDP 2013). “The selection of seven females as ministers, along with 145 women entering parliament, is something that has never happened before in the Arab world,” said a spokeswoman for UN Women. “What Algeria has reached so far is very impressive.”Footnote 15

The salience of regime gains was further heightened by the particular timing of our survey. Conducted in February 2020, our survey captured the tail end of the 2019–20 Hirak protests, a mass uprising that toppled Bouteflika and then continued on against the remnants of his regime. In this context of mass frustration with the regime, we would expect regime opponents to be especially wary of granting the regime legitimacy, and supporters especially eager to.

With both the gains to the regime and to women salient, Algeria in 2020 is thus a uniquely powerful case for examining public opinion toward the trade-off. Our primes, discussed below, are likely to tap into real and strongly held beliefs. Algerians’ support or opposition for gender quotas in our survey is thus likely not an idle opinion, but a highly salient position with visible implications.

A final reason for studying Algeria is to better understand why the gender quotas were watered down after Bouteflika was toppled. Recognizing that Bouteflika’s regime had lost popularity, his successor, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, attempted to distance his autocracy from Bouteflika’s, inaugurating a “New Republic.” Within this effort, Tebboune announced that the “ignorant” era of gender quotas had ended (Marwane Reference Marwane2021) and repealed them to break with the “bad practices of the past” (Algérie Presse Service 2020) and better reflect the “will of the people” (Algérie Presse Service 2021). The 2021 electoral law thus stopped enforcing the candidate quotas, and even opened up party lists to allow voters to select particular candidates. By doing so, women’s representation in the new parliament fell back down to just 8%, on par with the level prior to the 2012 quota adoption. Notably, this repeal elicited minimal public outcry, even from women’s rights activists. Our hypotheses provide one potential explanation for why: that Algerians who might otherwise have valued the gains to women understood that quotas had helped legitimize Bouteflika, and accordingly were less committed to keeping these tainted quotas in place.

Survey Methodology

Although Algeria is a useful case to test the mechanism, it is also a difficult environment for survey research, due to both state repression and animosity toward foreign researchers. For instance, the local partner of the Arab Barometer and Afrobarometer was placed under house arrest for over a year for conducting a survey prior to the Hirak protests. Even a French MP, who met with protesters in October 2019, was arrested and deported (Latrous Reference Latrous2019). These concerns made in-person survey research infeasible.

Instead, we conducted our survey online, recruiting Algerians through Facebook advertisements. Facebook ads have become an increasingly common survey recruitment device, in both the United States and the developing world (e.g., Cassese et al. Reference Cassese, Huddy, Hartman, Mason and Weber2013; Guiler Reference Guiler2020; Samuels and Zucco Reference Samuels and Zucco2014). Following this scholarship, we purchased advertisements on Facebook shown to all adult Algerians.Footnote 16 Clicking on the advertisement took users out of Facebook and into Qualtrics, where they first agreed to a consent form before viewing the survey.Footnote 17 Between February 5 and 21, 2020, 1,119 Algerians clicked on the advertisement and completed the survey experiment (for more details on survey methodology, see Appendix B.1 of the Supplementary Material). For all analyses, we subset to the 911 survey respondents who correctly answered an attention check question, but results are similar when using the full sample (see Appendix B.7 of the Supplementary Material).

Naturally, given the survey methodology, our sample is not nationally representative. Only 45% of Algerians (19 million) are active monthly users of Facebook. These 45% skew younger, more male, and likely also more urban, wealthy, and educated. We followed Zhang et al. (Reference Zhang, Mildenberger, Howe and Marlon2018) in implementing age and gender quota sampling during recruitment, bringing our sample more in line with the population on observable demographics (see Appendix B.1 of the Supplementary Material for more details on the survey sample). Still, there are likely other unobservable differences between individuals who are on Facebook and those who are not, so we cannot and do not claim that our sample is nationally representative. However, what is most important for our purposes is that demographics are balanced across treatment groups (see Supplementary Figure B.4), permitting a valid comparison for our survey experiment.

Survey Experiment

Embedded in the survey was an experiment priming respondents about the various effects of gender quotas.Footnote 18 Respondents were randomly sorted into either a control group or one of three treatment groups (Table 1). All respondents, including those in the control group, were told that Algeria adopted gender quotas starting in the 2012 elections requiring about 30% of party lists be women. The treatment groups then received additional text priming them to think about how these quotas led to gains for women (Treatment 1), led to gains for the regime (Treatment 2), or led to gains for both, compelling them to evaluate the trade-off (Treatment 3). The text of each prime was derived from the discussion above.

Table 1. Algeria Survey Experiment ( $ N=911 $ )

The experimental design thus helps us determine how the public views the trade-off. In both the women and trade-off primes, respondents learn about how quotas benefited women. If respondents do not mind the regime also gaining legitimacy, then they should evaluate the trade-off prime similarly to the women prime: in both cases producing a significant increase relative to the control. If, however, as we hypothesize, respondents do worry about regime gains, then they should be turned off by those gains, showing a significant increase in support for quotas in the women treatment but not also in the trade-off treatment. The regime prime, meanwhile, provides a clean test of our mechanism. We expect that reminding respondents that the regime gained legitimacy should produce a divergent reaction among regime supporters and opponents.

Notably, the design also helps us rule out alternative explanations for the overall Arab Barometer results. All groups, including the control, are told that the regime has implemented this policy, thus holding constant any endorsement effect by the regime. The primes instead single out how the regime has gained. Likewise, all groups, including the control, might be primed to think about parliament, controlling, therefore, for their thoughts about parliament and its strength or weakness.

To ensure respondents paid attention to the experiment, we followed up with an attention check: “Approximately what percent of party lists are currently reserved for women?” with answer options of 0%, 30%, or 50%. For all analyses, we subset to the 911 respondents (81%) who correctly answered 30%.Footnote 19

After these primes, respondents were asked for their level of support for gender quotas, worded the same as in the Arab Barometer.Footnote 20 Respondents could answer on a 5-point scale from strongly disagree to strongly agree. Figure 3 presents the results. Overall, only about 28% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed with the gender quota, 36% were neutral, and 36% disagreed or strongly disagreed. In line with our expectations, overall support for the quotas was low. Experimentally, we examine how support varied by the primes listed above.

Figure 3. Support for Gender Quotas

Experimental Results

Figure 4 presents the base results from our experiment.Footnote 21 First, when primed just about the gains to women (Treatment 1), Algerians became significantly more supportive of (and/or less opposed to) gender quotas than in the control group (2.99 vs. 2.74, $ p=0.023 $ ). Substantively, this effect is quite large: if we dichotomize the scale, about 24% of respondents in the control group supported gender quotas, compared to 32% in the women treatment, an 8 percentage-point increase. Given that few respondents supported quotas in the control group, the women treatment increased support by 33% from baseline. A short, informational prime highlighting the benefits to women thus considerably increased support for quotas.

Figure 4. Support for Quotas by Treatment Group ( $ N=911 $ )

Note: Figure created from model 2 in Table 2.

Supplementary analyses (Appendix B.5 of the Supplementary Material) shed light on why the women prime increased support for quotas. Post-experiment, we asked whether respondents believed “gender quotas advance women’s rights.” Respondents who received the women prime were significantly more likely to agree. Moreover, mediation analyses show that the only reason why the women prime increased support for quotas was by increasing this belief that quotas advance women’s rights (Supplementary Figure B.5).

However, neither of the other two treatments showed a significant effect on quota support relative to the control. When primed about the legitimacy quotas may grant to the regime (Treatment 2), respondents were no more supportive than in the control (2.81 vs. 2.74, $ p=0.49 $ ). As we show in the subgroup analyses below, this null effect masks important variation, with regime opponents becoming slightly less supportive of quotas, and regime supporters becoming significantly more supportive.

Finally, when presented with the trade-off (Treatment 3), respondents were likewise no more supportive than those in the control (2.84 vs. 2.74, $ p=0.34 $ ). The combination of a significant effect for Treatment 1, but not also for Treatment 3, shows that while learning about the gains to women increased support for quotas, learning about the gains to women and the regime did not. This suggests that while Algerians may value the gains to women, on average the cost of legitimizing the regime appears to outweigh these gains, depressing support in the trade-off.Footnote 22 The results thus provide strong evidence for the existence of a trade-off, showing that Algerians on average evaluate the trade-off negatively, more concerned about (not) granting the regime legitimacy than about the gains to women.

Table 2 shows that all results hold when controlling for covariates.Footnote 23 Model 1 first presents the relationship without controls. In model 2, we add demographic variables: gender, age, education, income, urban, unemployment, student, and marriage. We also control for whether they are Amazigh, and for two knowledge questions: whether they had heard of Algeria’s gender quotas, and whether they knew when they were first implemented (asked prior to the primes). Model 3 then adds several attitudinal variables, including respondents’ evaluation of the economy; their level of support for democracy and for the Hirak protests; their level of agreement with the statement, “In general, social and economic problems would improve if there were more women in office” (as a proxy for gender egalitarianism); and finally, whether they self-identify as Islamist/Salafist. Despite these controls, the results remain: Algerians became more supportive of quotas when primed about the gains to women, but not when also primed about the gains to the regime. While Algerians, therefore, value the gains to women, these gains appear to be outweighed by concerns over granting the regime legitimacy, at least in this context of a mass uprising against the regime.

Table 2. Support for Gender Quotas by Treatment Group (OLS)

Note: $ {}^{*}p<0.1 $ ; $ {}^{**}p<0.05 $ ; $ {}^{***}p<0.01 $ .

Many of the covariates have their expected effects. Women and more gender egalitarian respondents were significantly more supportive of quotas, whereas Islamists were less supportive. Respondents who supported democracy were likewise more supportive of quotas. Curiously, respondents who had heard of the quotas prior to our survey were less supportive of them, perhaps more attuned to how they benefited the Bouteflika regime. We delve further into these considerations next in the subgroup analyses.

Subgroup Analysis

While Algerians overall tend to evaluate the trade-off negatively, there are also important subgroup differences. First, as expected (H1), quotas are evaluated differently by regime supporters and opponents. Figure 5 splits the sample by those who support the ongoing mass protests (the Hirak) against the regime ( $ N=451 $ , “Regime Opponents”) and those who do not ( $ N=386 $ , “Regime Supporters”). Regime opponents (left) mimic the general population: significantly moved by the gains to women (Women vs. Control, $ p=0.017 $ ), but not when also primed about the gains to the regime (Trade-Off vs. Control, $ p=0.198 $ ). Protesting the regime, they are highly concerned about granting it legitimacy.Footnote 24

Figure 5. Treatment Effects by Regime Support/Opposition

Note: Figures created from models 1 and 2 in Table 3.

The regime supporters, on the other hand, want to grant the regime legitimacy. They are accordingly moved by the regime treatment: becoming significantly more supportive of quotas when primed about how it will bring the regime legitimacy (Regime vs. Control, $ p=0.030 $ ).Footnote 25 Regime supporters appear less concerned about empowering women, and are not moved by the women treatment (Women vs. Control, $ p=0.2 $ ). They likewise are not moved by the trade-off (Trade-Off vs. Control, $ p=0.46 $ ), which to them perhaps muddies the gains to the regime by also discussing the gains to women.Footnote 26 In short, while regime opponents face a major trade-off that outweighs their desire for women’s empowerment, regime supporters are instead eager to grant the regime legitimacy.

Table 3 presents each of the above results. Models 1 and 2 show the experiment when subsetting to regime opponents and regime supporters, respectively. Model 3 shows that results hold when instead interacting each treatment with regime opposition: priming regime gains increases support for quotas among regime supporters ( $ p=0.044 $ ), but this reverses among regime opponents ( $ p=0.046 $ ). Finally, most intuitively, model 4 subsets just to respondents who received the regime prime. When cognizant of the regime gains, regime supporters were significantly more supportive of quotas than opponents ( $ p=0.023 $ ). These results help explain why in the Arab Barometer regime supporters support quotas more than opponents.

Table 3. Treatment Effects by Regime Support/Opposition (OLS)

Note: $ {}^{*}p<0.1 $ ; $ {}^{**}p<0.05 $ ; $ {}^{***}p<0.01 $ .

Secondary Hypotheses

There are also important subgroup differences by our hypothesized demographic variables. First, Figure 6 splits the sample by gender (H2). Men ( $ N=417 $ ) mimic the general population, becoming more supportive of quotas when primed about the gains to women ( $ p=0.022 $ ), but no longer more supportive when presented with the trade-off. Women ( $ N=420 $ ), meanwhile, show high support for quotas across the board, regardless of treatment condition, in line with H2. More committed to quotas, women’s views are not shaped by the primes or the trade-off.

Figure 6. Treatment Effects by Gender

Note: Figures created from models 1 and 2 in Table 4.

Likewise, Algerians who were more gender egalitarian were more committed to quotas regardless of the regime benefiting. Figure 7 plots those who agree that “in general, social and economic problems would improve if there were more women in office” ( $ N=188 $ , left), compared to those who disagree, are neutral, or don’t know ( $ N=679 $ , right). In line with H3, gender egalitarian respondents show high support across the board, unmoved by treatment group. Gender inegalitarian respondents, meanwhile, mimic the general population, moved by the gains to women ( $ p=0.007 $ ) by not so much that they outweigh the trade-off.Footnote 27

Figure 7. Treatment Effects by Gender Egalitarianism

Note: Figures created from models 3 and 4 in Table 4.

However, we acknowledge that the sample size for gender egalitarian respondents is quite small (188), raising the possibility of false negatives. In particular, the regime treatment is close to significance ( $ p=0.17 $ ), and might have been significant with a larger sample. One interpretation is that gender egalitarian respondents likely held a very favorable view of the women’s rights group CIDDEF, and were accordingly moved by CIDDEF’s praise for the regime in this treatment group.

Finally, there are also differences by political ideology (H4). Figure 8 shows that respondents who self-describe as Islamists or Salafists ( $ N=173 $ , left) tend to oppose gender quotas across the board (average of 2.4 on the 5-point scale), unaffected by any of the treatments. Meanwhile, respondents who do not identify as Islamists ( $ N=694 $ , right) mimic the general trend, significantly more supportive of quotas when told women would benefit ( $ p=0.003 $ ), but no longer so when told that the regime would, too. In other words, in line with H4, concerns over regime legitimacy appear to shape non-Islamists more than Islamists, who tend to be more consistently opposed to quotas.

Figure 8. Treatment Effects by Ideology

*Note: Figures created from models 5 and 6 in Table 4.

For the Islamists as well, we acknowledge that the small sample size might have increased the likelihood of a false negative. The regime treatment ( $ p=0.24 $ in our sample) might have been significant in a larger sample. One interpretation is that the Islamists in our survey, who tend to support various Islamist parties coopted by the regime, might have been relatively more pro-regime and accordingly swayed by the regime treatment.

Table 4 shows that each of these subgroup results is statistically significant in the presence of demographic and attitudinal covariates. While the overall sample thus showed evidence of the trade-off, this supplementary analysis shows that the salience of this trade-off varies by our theorized subgroups.

Table 4. Support for Gender Quotas among Various Subsets (OLS)

Note: $ {}^{*}p<0.1 $ ; $ {}^{**}p<0.05 $ ; $ {}^{***}p<0.01 $ .

In short, the survey experiment in Algeria reveals strong support for the theory: gender quotas present a salient trade-off in autocracies between empowering women and legitimizing the regime. This trade-off leads regime supporters to embrace quotas and regime opponents to be wary of them, even when otherwise valuing the gains to women. However, the salience of this trade-off also varies by a number of mitigating factors. Groups that are generally supportive of quotas (women, gender egalitarians) or that are generally opposed to quotas (Islamists) tend to be less concerned about the trade-off, being more ideologically committed for or against quotas. The trade-off thus appears to matter most among subgroups whose attitudes toward quotas are more indeterminate, and thus potentially movable by considerations about who is to gain.

While the survey experiment thus provides support for each of our hypotheses, it is also important to acknowledge two limitations. First, the results are attitudinal, and future research could examine whether such primes also shape behaviors, such as signing a petition in favor of quotas. Second, the women prime was not quite significant relative to the trade-off prime; we would encourage future research to leverage a larger sample size to tease this out further.

CONCLUSION

Our findings carry several important implications. First, we uncover the first causal evidence of a trade-off in public evaluations of gender quotas in autocracies. While quotas empower women, they also grant the regime legitimacy, producing a trade-off that shapes public opinion in a number of theorized ways. Adding to the literature on backlash effects of gender quotas (Berry, Bouka, and Kamuru Reference Berry, Bouka and Kamuru2020; Clayton Reference Clayton2015), we theorize and provide initial empirical support for this additional source of backlash in autocracies.

Second, our study implies that this trade-off might undermine the long-term durability of gender quotas, and potentially, women’s rights activism writ large. If quotas are widely viewed as a vestige of authoritarianism, tainted by the dictator’s schemes, then they may enjoy lukewarm support even after the dictator is toppled. Such tainted quotas may therefore be unlikely to stand the test of time, as seen in Algeria where Bouteflika’s quotas were watered down after he fell. Moreover, genderwashing may not only taint the reforms but also the activists who worked with the dictator. For instance, Tunisian women’s rights activists had become tainted by their affiliation with the previous regime of Ben Ali, making it more difficult for them to advance women’s rights after the revolution (Tripp Reference Tripp2019). As one activist noted, “the dictatorship was pro-women…[so] the hatred against the dictatorship is expressed through action against women” (quoted in Alami Reference Alami2013). If future scholarship shows that these trends generalize, it would suggest that authoritarian genderwashing might provide short-term gains but long-term costs to women’s empowerment.

Third, for actors interested in increasing public support for gender quotas, our results demonstrate the power of even short, informational messages (solely) about the gains to women. More generally, depoliticizing gender reforms—disassociating them from a particular dictator or regime—might be crucial for securing widespread, long-term buy-in into such reforms.

Fourth, while our results focus on gender reforms, they likely speak more broadly to other liberalizing reforms undertaken by authoritarian regimes such as competitive elections or human rights councils. While these reforms are potentially more risky to regimes (Donno and Kreft Reference Donno and Kreft2019), they similarly earn them praise and help them survive (Blaydes Reference Blaydes2010; Gandhi and Przeworski Reference Gandhi and Przeworski2007; Magaloni Reference Magaloni2006). If our results are any guide, such reforms may produce similar trade-offs in public opinion, with regime opponents skeptical of such reforms even when they support them in substance, wary of the legitimacy they may grant to the regime.

Our theory likely travels beyond the Arab world and beyond dictatorships. On the one hand, the trade-off we identify should be most salient in the Arab world, where the gains to women through quotas have been largest; in regimes with Islamists in the opposition, where the threat to those gains are clearest; and in dictatorships, where the costs of legitimizing the regime are highest. At the same time, it is possible that similar, if weaker, trade-offs might be present elsewhere, such as in democracies with strong polarization or populism. There as well, citizens might associate a gender quota with the particular party or political class that adopted it, and not want to give that group credit or legitimacy.

Democratic Tunisia (2011–21), for instance, recently saw a similar backlash dynamic as in autocratic Algeria. The democratically elected governments had strengthened Tunisia’s gender quotas, earning domestic and international praise (Yerkes and McKeown Reference Yerkes and McKeown2018). Yet, as Tunisians grew disillusioned with those governments, they also appeared to grow disillusioned with their gender quotas, as if they had become tainted by that “dark decade.” After staging his coup in 2021, President Kais Saied abandoned those quotas with minimal public outcry, and women’s representation in the 2023 parliament fell to just 15.6%. Thus, even in democracies, quotas may similarly become tainted and thus brittle. Indeed, in the Arab Barometer surveys, regime support still exhibited a significant, albeit weaker, effect in the flawed democracies than autocracies.

In Latin America, Barnes and Córdova (Reference Barnes and Córdova2016) show that perceptions of government quality similarly correlate with support for gender quotas. Our reanalysis of the Latin American Public Opinion Project survey dataFootnote 28 show that while the trade-off is stronger in autocracies, regime support still correlates with support for gender quotas even in the democracies, and likewise varies according to our secondary hypotheses regarding women, gender egalitarians, and political ideology. These results suggest that our findings might travel to other regions and regime types.

Finally, the trade-off we identify might also find cognates in established European democracies. For instance, when far-right parties in France and Italy fielded Marine Le Pen and Giorgia Meloni, liberals who might otherwise have praised women’s empowerment were more hesitant, wary of legitimizing the far-right (Chira Reference Chira2017; Snipes and Mudde Reference Snipes and Mudde2020). In sum, while these trade-offs should be especially salient in Arab dictatorships, we encourage future studies to explore similar logics more globally.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S000305542300059X.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

Research documentation and data that support the findings of this study are openly available at the American Political Science Review Dataverse: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/5K89TG.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank all the Algerians who took the time to take our survey. We are indebted to helpful comments from the editors and four anonymous reviewers as well as seminar and workshop participants at Harvard Kennedy School’s Middle East Initiative, the Gender in MENA Politics Research Group, and the 2021 MESA conference.

FUNDING STATEMENT

The survey in Algeria was approved by Princeton IRB #11581 and W&M #PHSC-2019-03-11-13532 and was funded by W&M’s Global Research Institute.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The authors declare no ethical issues or conflicts of interest in this research.

ETHICAL STANDARDS

The authors declare the human subjects research in this article was reviewed and approved by William & Mary (PHSC-2019-03-11-13532), Princeton University (IRB #11581), UCLA (IRB#16-001270 and IRB#17-001041), and the University of Notre Dame (IRB#16-05-3165). The authors affirm that this article adheres to the APSA’s Principles and Guidance on Human Subject Research.

Footnotes

1 However, women’s rights activism does also shape their calculations (e.g., Bauer Reference Bauer2012; Kang and Tripp Reference Kang and Tripp2018; Krook Reference Krook2009; Tripp Reference Tripp2019).

2 However, quotas may not always empower women, and certain types might be more effective than others (i.e., Clayton Reference Clayton2021; Donno and Kreft Reference Donno and Kreft2019; Goetz Reference Goetz2002; Muriaas and Wang Reference Muriaas and Wang2012).

3 Interview with Noh in Algiers, Algeria, July 2017. All interviews presented in this article were conducted in accordance with approved IRB procedures and after obtaining informed consent (Noh, Grewal, and Kilavuz Reference Noh, Grewal and Kilavuz2023). They were semistructured and ranged from 30 minutes to 3 hours, with an average length of an hour. In order to recruit interviewees, the author identified and reached out to experts on the subject matter—politicians, bureaucrats, activists, scholars, and journalists—and also used a snowball method of sampling to seek out additional participants. Due to the potential sensitivity of the subject matter in authoritarian regimes, the interviewees were given a choice to remain anonymous.

4 Interview with Noh in Constantine, Algeria, July 2017.

5 Similarly, Noh and Shalaby (Reference Noh and Shalaby2023) find that discontent with government performance is a strong predictor of decreased support for quotas in authoritarian Morocco and transitioning Tunisia.

6 Interview with Noh in Kuwait City, Kuwait, September 2016.

7 See Supplementary Figures A.4 and A.5 and Supplementary Table A.3.

8 See Appendix A.4 of the Supplementary Material for the list of questions used.

9 See Supplementary A.4 for the questions used.

10 The requirement varied from 20% to 50% depending on the size of the party list.

11 Quoted in Ouali (Reference Ouali2017).

12 Quoted in Ahmed (Reference Ahmed2012).

13 Interview with Kilavuz in Algiers, Algeria, December 2016.

14 Quoted in Chalal (Reference Chalal2014). See also Lorch and Bunk (Reference Lorch and Bunk2016).

15 Quoted in Soliman (Reference Soliman2014).

16 See Supplementary Figure B.1 for details. Separately, we also targeted one advertisement to likely military personnel, allowing us to oversample the military. We remove all active-duty personnel for the analysis in this article.

17 There are important ethical concerns about the data Facebook collects on its users. Because our study is conducted in Qualtrics, all Facebook learns is whether users engaged with or clicked on the advertisement. Facebook does not learn their survey responses.

18 We did not pre-register our hypotheses, given that we were moving rapidly to field the survey before the Hirak protests ended.

19 There is no correlation between treatment group and passing the attention check, and results hold when including those who failed the test. See Appendix B.7 of the Supplementary Material.

20 It is possible that the wording of this question, noting that quotas are intended to “achieve fairer representation” for women, might have primed respondents to think about the gains to women even in the control group. If so, then the women treatment priming the gains to women might have been even stronger had we used a more neutral dependent variable.

21 Cross-hatches represent 95% confidence intervals and bold portions represent 90% confidence intervals.

22 While the appropriate comparison is the control group, it is worth noting that the women prime also produced nearly significantly higher support than the regime prime ( $ p=0.12 $ ) and trade-off prime ( $ p=0.17 $ ).

23 See Appendix B.8 of the Supplementary Material for wording of the survey questions used for covariates.

24 Regime opponents primed that the regime will gain were significantly less supportive of quotas than those primed that women will gain (Regime vs. Women, $ p=0.0019 $ ).

25 In future studies with a larger sample size, it would be useful to break up this prime to determine if it is domestic or international legitimacy that drives the effect. Our survey provides tentative evidence that it is not international legitimacy. Post-experiment, the survey asked whether “Gender quotas improve Algeria’s image in the international community.” Surprisingly, the regime treatment did not increase agreement with this statement, nor did this statement mediate the effect of the regime treatment onto support for gender quotas (results available from authors). These results suggest that international legitimacy might not be driving the effect. However, we cannot determine whether domestic legitimacy is indeed the cause.

26 Another possibility for both of these null effects might be that in the polarizing context of the Hirak uprising, regime supporters might be instinctively opposed to any mention of political reform, including empowering women. Its invocation in the trade-off might, therefore, depress support for quotas in that treatment.

27 Further analysis shows that the effect of Treatment 1 is driven by those who answered neutral or do not know on gender egalitarianism, not by those who opposed it.

28 See an additional appendix on the APSR Dataverse (Noh, Grewal, and Kilavuz Reference Noh, Grewal and Kilavuz2023).

References

Abou-Zeid, Gihan. 2006. “The Arab Region: Women’s Access to the Decision-Making Process across the Arab Nation.” Chap. 7 in Women, Quotas and Politics, ed. Dahlerup, Drude. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Adams, Melinda. 2007. “‘National Machineries’ and Authoritarian Politics: The Case of Cameroon.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 9 (2): 176–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ahmed, Hamid Ould. 2012. “Arab World Gets New Trailblazer for Women in Politics.” Reuters, June 13. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-algeria-parliament-women/arab-world-gets-new-trailblazer-for-women-in-politics-idUSBRE85C0UH20120613.Google Scholar
Alami, Aida. 2013. “Women Face Fight to Keep Their Rights in Tunisia.” The New York Times, February 20. https://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/21/world/middleeast/women-face-fight-to-keep-their-rights-in-tunisia.html.Google Scholar
Al-Banna, Hassan. [1947] 2006. “Towards the Light.” In Six Tracts of Hasan Al-Banna. Aachen, Germany: International Islamic Federation of Student Organizations.Google Scholar
Algérie Presse Service. 2020. “Une année après l’investiture du Président: la révision de la Constitution, chantier phare de l’Algérie nouvelle.” December 18. https://www.aps.dz/algerie/114478-une-annee-apres-l-investiture-du-president-tebboune-la-revision-de-la-constitution-chantier-phare-de-l-algerie-nouvelle.Google Scholar
Algérie Presse Service. 2021. “Tebboune: Bâtir une Algérie nouvelle fondée sur les choix du peuple.” April 5. https://www.aps.dz/algerie/120180-tebboune-batir-une-algerie-nouvelle-fondee-sur-les-choix-du-peuple.Google Scholar
Barnes, Tiffany D., and Córdova, Abby. 2016. “Making Space for Women: Explaining Citizen Support for Legislative Gender Quotas in Latin America.” Journal of Politics 78 (3): 670–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Batista Pereira, Frederico, and Porto, Nathália F. F. 2020. “Gender Attitudes and Public Opinion towards Electoral Gender Quotas in Brazil.” Political Psychology 41 (5): 887–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bauer, Gretchen. 2012. “‘Let there be a Balance’: Women in African Parliaments.” Political Studies Review 10 (3): 370–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beauregard, Katrine. 2018. “Partisanship and the Gender Gap: Support for Gender Quotas in Australia.” Australian Journal of Political Science 53 (3): 290319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben Shitrit, Lihi. 2016. “Authenticating Representation: Women’s Quotas and Islamist Parties.” Politics & Gender 12 (4): 781806.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benstead, Lindsay J. 2016. “Why Quotas Are Needed to Improve Women’s Access to Services in Clientelistic Regimes.” Governance 29 (2): 185205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, Marie E., Bouka, Yolande, and Kamuru, Marilyn Muthoni. 2020. “Implementing Inclusion: Gender Quotas, Inequality, and Backlash in Kenya.” Politics & Gender 4 (1): 3563.Google Scholar
Bhavnani, Rikhil R. 2009. “Do Electoral Quotas Work after They Are Withdrawn? Evidence from a Natural Experiment in India.” American Political Science Review 103 (1): 2335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bjarnegård, Elin, and Zetterberg, Pär. 2016. “Gender Equality Reforms on an Uneven Playing Field: Candidate Selection and Quota Implementation in Electoral Authoritarian Tanzania.” Government and Opposition 51 (3): 464–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bjarnegård, Elin, and Zetterberg, Pär. 2022. “How Autocrats Weaponize Women’s Rights.” Journal of Democracy 33 (2): 6075.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blackman, Alexandra Domike, and Jackson, Marlette. 2019. “Gender Stereotypes, Political Leadership, and Voting Behavior in Tunisia.” Political Behavior 43: 1037–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blaydes, Lisa. 2010. Elections and Distributive Politics in Mubarak’s Egypt. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brulé, Rachel E. 2020. “Reform, Representation, and Resistance: The Politics of Property Rights’ Enforcement.” Journal of Politics 82 (4): 1390–405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnet, Jennie E. 2011. “Women have Found Respect: Gender Quotas, Symbolic Representation, and Female Empowerment in Rwanda.” Politics & Gender 7 (3): 303–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bush, Sarah Sunn. 2011. “International Politics and the Spread of Quotas for Women in Legislatures.” International Organization 65 (1): 103–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bush, Sarah Sunn, and Jamal, Amaney. 2015. “Anti-Americanism, Authoritarian Politics, and Attitudes about Women’s Representation: Evidence from a Survey Experiment in Jordan.” International Studies Quarterly 59 (1): 3445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bush, Sarah Sunn, and Zetterberg, Pär. 2020. “Gender Quotas and International Reputation.” American Journal of Political Science 65 (2): 326–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassese, Erin, Barnes, Tiffany D., and Branton, Regina. 2015. “Racializing Gender: Public Opinion at the Intersection.” Politics & Gender 11 (2): 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassese, Erin C., Huddy, Leonie, Hartman, Todd K., Mason, Lilliana, and Weber, Christopher R.. 2013. “Socially-Mediated Internet Surveys (SMIS): Recruiting Participants for Online Experiments.” PS: Political Science and Politics 46 (4): 775–84.Google Scholar
Chalal, Ania Naït. 2014. “L’UNFA soutient Bouteflika.” Le Courrier d’Algerie, March 5. http://lecourrier-dalgerie.com/lunfa-soutient-bouteflika/.Google Scholar
Chenoweth, Erica, and Marks, Zoe. 2022. “Revenge of the Patriarchs: Why Autocrats Fear Women.” Foreign Affairs, March–April 2022.Google Scholar
Chira, Susan. 2017. “Marine Le Pen’s Canny Use of Gender in Her Campaign.” The New York Times, May 4. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/04/world/europe/le-pens-campaign-strategy-shift-strong-but-soft.html.Google Scholar
Clayton, Amanda. 2015. “Women’s Political Engagement under Quota-Mandated Female Representation: Evidence from a Randomized Policy Experiment.” Comparative Political Studies 48 (3): 333–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, Amanda. 2021. “How Do Electoral Gender Quotas Affect Policy?Annual Review of Political Science 24: 235–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, Amanda, and Zetterberg, Pår. 2018. “Quota Shocks: Electoral Gender Quotas and Government Spending Priorities Worldwide.” Journal of Politics 80 (3): 916–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, Amanda, and Zetterberg, Pår. 2021. “Gender and Party Discipline: Evidence from Africa’s Emerging Party Systems.” American Political Science Review 115 (3): 869–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahlerup, Drude, ed. 2013. Women, Quotas and Politics. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
David, Assaf, and Nanes, Stefanie. 2011. “The Women’s Quota in Jordan’s Municipal Councils: International and Domestic Dimensions.” Journal of Women, Politics, & Policy 32 (4): 275304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deckman, Melissa, and McTeague, John. 2015. “Did the War on Women Work? Women, Men, and the Birth Control Mandate in the 2012 Presidential Election.” American Politics Research 43 (1): 326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donno, Daniela, Fox, Sara, and Kaasik, Joshua. 2022. “International Incentives for Women’s Rights in Dictatorships.” Comparative Political Studies 55 (3): 451–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donno, Daniela, and Kreft, Anne-Kathrin. 2019. “Authoritarian Institutions and Women’s Rights.” Comparative Political Studies 52 (5): 720–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edgell, Amanda. 2017. “Foreign Aid, Democracy and Gender Quota Laws.” Democratization 24 (6): 1103–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elder, Laurel, and Green, Steven. 2012. The Politics of Parenthood: Causes and Consequences of the Politicization and Polarization of the American Family. Albany: State University of New York Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gandhi, Jennifer, and Przeworski, Adam. 2007. “Authoritarian Institutions and the Survival of Autocrats.” Comparative Political Studies 40 (11): 1279–301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gidengil, Elisabeth. 1996. “Gender and Attitudes toward Quotas for Women Candidates in Canada.” Women and Politics 16 (4): 2144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilligan, Carol. 1982. In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women’s Development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Goetz, Anne Marie. 2002. “No Shortcuts to Power: Constraints on Women’s Political Effectiveness in Uganda.” Journal of Modern African Studies 40 (4): 549–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gouvy, Constantin. 2020. “Decade after Revolution, Tunisia’s Women Face Uphill Battle.” Al Jazeera, January 17. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/1/17/a-decade-after-revolution-tunisias-women-face-an-uphill-battle.Google Scholar
Gray, Doris H. 2012. “Tunisia after the Uprising: Islamist and Secular Quests for Women’s Rights.” Mediterranean Politics 17 (3): 285302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guiler, Kim. 2020. “From Prison to Parliament: Victimhood, Identity, and Electoral Support.” Mediterranean Politics 26 (2): 168–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamadouche, Louisa Dris-Aït. 2016. “Les femmes dans le système politique algérien: Entre inclusion sélective et exclusion ciblée.” Insaniyat 74: 7586.Google Scholar
Htun, Mala, Lacalle, Marina, and Micozzi, Juan Pablo. 2013. “Does Women’s Presence Change Legislative Behavior? Evidence from Argentina, 1983–2007.” Journal of Politics in Latin America 5 (1): 95125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, Melanie, Krook, Mona Lena, and Paxton, Pamela. 2015. “Transnational Women’s Activism and the Global Diffusion of Gender Quotas.” International Studies Quarterly 59 (2): 357–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, Melanie M., Paxton, Pamela, Clayton, Amanda B., and Zetterberg, Pär. 2019. “Global Gender Quota Adoption, Implementation, and Reform.” Comparative Politics 51 (2): 219–38.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ignatius, David. 2021. “Opinion: Egypt Presents Biden a Familiar Conundrum: How to Handle a ‘Friendly’ Authoritarian.” The Washington Post, February 25. https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/egypt-presents-biden-a-familiar-conundrum-how-to-handle-a-friendly-authoritarian/2021/02/25/1f02e122-778a-11eb-8115-9ad5e9c02117_story.html.Google Scholar
Jones, Mark P. 2009. “Gender Quotas, Electoral Laws, and the Election of Women: Evidence from the Latin American Vanguard.” Comparative Political Studies 42 (1): 5681.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kang, Alice. 2009. “Studying Oil, Islam, and Women as if Political Institutions Mattered.” Politics & Gender 5 (4): 560–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kang, Alice J., and Tripp, Aili Mari. 2018. “Coalitions Matter: Citizenship, Women, and Quota Adoption in Africa.” Perspectives on Politics 16 (1): 7391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kao, Kristen, Lust, Ellen, Shalaby, Marwa, and Weiss, Chagai. 2023. “Female Representation and Legitimacy: Evidence from a Harmonized Experiment in Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia.” American Political Science Review, 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055423000357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keenan, Lisa, and McElroy, Gail. 2016. “Who Supports Gender Quotas in Ireland?Irish Political Studies 32 (3): 382403.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krook, Mona Lena. 2009. Quotas for Women in Politics: Gender and Candidate Selection Reform Worldwide. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lahlouh, Ala. 2010. Al-Ajenda Al-Ijtima‘Iyya Li-Harakat Hamas. Ramallah: The Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research.Google Scholar
Latrous, Neila. 2019. “Algeria: French MP Mathilde Panot Arrested in Bejaia.” The Africa Report, October 2. https://www.theafricareport.com/17923/algeria-french-mp-mathilde-panot-arrested-in-bejaia/.Google Scholar
Lazreg, Marnia. 1990. “Gender and Politics in Algeria: Unraveling the Religious Paradigm.” Signs 15 (4): 755–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lorch, Jasmin, and Bunk, Bettina. 2016. “Gender Politics, Authoritarian Regime Resilience, and the Role of Civil Society in Algeria and Mozambique.” GIGA Working Paper 292.Google Scholar
Magaloni, Beatriz. 2006. Voting for Autocracy: Hegemonic Party Survival and its Demise in Mexico. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marwane, Ahmed. 2021. “Women and Politics in Algeria: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back.” Washington Institute for Near East Policy.Google Scholar
Meier, Petra. 2008. “A Gender Gap Not Closed by Quotas: The Renegotiation of the Public Sphere.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 10 (3): 329–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meltzer, Alan H., and Richard, Scott F.. 1981. “A Rational Theory of the Size of Government.” Journal of Political Economy 89 (5): 914–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moghadam, Valentine M. 2001. “Organizing Women: The New Women’s Movement in Algeria.” Cultural Dynamics 13 (2): 131–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morgan, Jana, and Buice, Melissa. 2013. “Latin American Attitudes toward Women in Politics: The Influence of Elite Cues, Female Advancement, and Individual Characteristics.” American Political Science Review 107 (4): 644–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muriaas, Ragnhild L., and Wang, Vibeke. 2012. “Executive Dominance and the Politics of Quota Representation in Uganda.” Journal of Modern African Studies 50 (2): 309–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nanes, Stefanie. 2015. ““The Quota Encouraged Me to Run”: Evaluating Jordan’s Municipal Quota for Women.” Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies 11 (3): 261–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noh, Yuree, Grewal, Sharan, and Kilavuz, M. Tahir. 2023. “Replication Data for: Regime Support and Gender Quotas in Autocracies.” Harvard Dataverse. Dataset. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/5K89TG.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noh, Yuree, and Shalaby, Marwa. 2023. “Who Supports Gender Quotas in Transitioning and Authoritarian States in the Middle East and North Africa?” Working Paper.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noralla, Nora. 2022. “Inside Egypt’s Feminist Washing.” TIMEP, September 26. https://timep.org/commentary/analysis/inside-egypts-feminist-washing/.Google Scholar
Norris, Pippa. 1987. Politics and Sexual Equality. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner.Google Scholar
Ouali, Aomar. 2017. “Wanted: Female Candidates for Algeria’s Parliament Quota.” Associated Press, March 5. https://apnews.com/article/adb74c85ba6641ddb8bc7f7e11a731ed.Google Scholar
Samuels, David, and Zucco, Cesar. 2014. “The Power of Partisanship in Brazil: Evidence from Survey Experiments.” American Journal of Political Science 58 (1): 212–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sater, James N. 2007. “Changing Politics from Below? Women Parliamentarians in Morocco.” Democratization 14 (4): 723–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seawright, Jason, and Gerring, John. 2008. “Case Selection Techniques in Case Study Research.” Political Research Quarterly 61 (2): 294308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shalaby, Marwa M., and Elimam, Laila. 2020. “Women in Legislative Committees in Arab Parliaments.” Comparative Politics 53 (1): 139–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snipes, Alexandra, and Mudde, Cas. 2020. “‘France’s (Kinder, Gentler) Extremist’: Marine Le Pen, Intersectionality, and Media Framing of Female Populist Radical Right Leaders.” Politics & Gender 16 (2): 438–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soliman, Alia. 2014. “UN Praises Algeria for Appointing Seven Female Ministers.” Al-Ahram, May 8. https://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/2/8/100803/World/Region/UN-praises-Algeria-for-appointing-seven-female-min.aspx.Google Scholar
Towns, Ann E. 2010. Women and States: Norms and Hierarchies in International Society. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tripp, Aili Mari. 2019. Seeking Legitimacy: Why Arab Autocracies Adopt Women’s Rights. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tripp, Aili Mari. 2022. “Why African Autocracies Promote Women Leaders.” Working Paper.Google Scholar
Tripp, Aili Mari, and Kang, Alice. 2008. “The Global Impact of Quotas: On the Fast Track to Female Representation.” Comparative Political Studies 31 (5): 338–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turshen, Meredeth. 2002. “Algerian Women in the Liberation Struggle and the Civil War: From Active Participants to Passive Victims?Social Research 69 (3): 889911.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
UN Women. 2012. “UN Women Welcomes Increased Number of Women in Algeria’s Parliament.” May 16. https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2012/5/un-women-welcomes-increased-number-of-women-in-algeria-s-parliament.Google Scholar
UNDP. 2013. “Quotas are Necessary to Form a ‘Critical Mass’ of Arab Women Parliamentarians.” December 11.Google Scholar
Valdini, Melody E. 2019. The Inclusion Calculation: Why Men Appropriate Women’s Representation. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welbourne, Bozena Chrisina. 2010. “The Strategic Use of Gender Quotas in the Arab World.” IFES Fellowship in Democracy Studies.Google Scholar
Yacoubi, Imen. 2016. “Sovereignty from Below: State Feminism and Politics of Women against Women in Tunisia.” Arab Studies Journal 24 (1): 254–74.Google Scholar
Yerkes, Sarah, and McKeown, Shannon. 2018. “What Tunisia Can Teach the United States about Women’s Equality.” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.Google Scholar
Zetterberg, Pär. 2009. “Do Gender Quotas Foster Women’s Political Engagement?Political Research Quarterly 62 (4): 714–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Baobao, Mildenberger, Matto, Howe, Peter D., and Marlon, Jennifer. 2018. “Quota Sampling Using Facebook Advertisements.” Political Science Research and Methods 8 (3): 558–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Predicted Probabilities for Support for QuotaNote: Figures created from Supplementary Table A.2.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Predicted Probabilities for Support for Quota: Subgroup AnalysisNote: Figures created from models 1–3 in Supplementary Table A.3.

Figure 2

Table 1. Algeria Survey Experiment ($ N=911 $)

Figure 3

Figure 3. Support for Gender Quotas

Figure 4

Figure 4. Support for Quotas by Treatment Group ($ N=911 $)Note: Figure created from model 2 in Table 2.

Figure 5

Table 2. Support for Gender Quotas by Treatment Group (OLS)

Figure 6

Figure 5. Treatment Effects by Regime Support/OppositionNote: Figures created from models 1 and 2 in Table 3.

Figure 7

Table 3. Treatment Effects by Regime Support/Opposition (OLS)

Figure 8

Figure 6. Treatment Effects by GenderNote: Figures created from models 1 and 2 in Table 4.

Figure 9

Figure 7. Treatment Effects by Gender EgalitarianismNote: Figures created from models 3 and 4 in Table 4.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Treatment Effects by Ideology*Note: Figures created from models 5 and 6 in Table 4.

Figure 11

Table 4. Support for Gender Quotas among Various Subsets (OLS)

Supplementary material: Link

Noh et al. Dataset

Link
Supplementary material: PDF

Noh et al. supplementary material

Appendix

Download Noh et al. supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 1000 KB
Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.