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In this investigation of the voluntary participation of men and women, we find that even when the definition of activity is broadened beyond the electoral forms of activity usually considered, men are a bit more active in politics than women. However, the pattern across activities does not conform to the expectations generated by the literature. In comparison with men, women are disadvantaged when it comes to the resources that facilitate political activity. When these resource deficits are viewed in the context of the paths to participation taken by men and women, it turns out that if women were as well endowed with political resources as men, their overall levels of political activity would be closer to men's and their financial contributions would be considerably closer to men's.
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Kay Lehman Schlozman
Boston College
Nancy Burns
University of Michigan
Sidney Verba
Northwestern University
The Journal of Politics
University of Michigan
Harvard University Press
Boston College
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Schlozman et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dfec6c60d9fa30ca7a0fd1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/2132069