The persistence of female political power in Africa
Wednesday 1 October 16:00 until 17:00
Online : Online via Zoom
Speaker: Siwan Anderson - Vancouver School of Economics, University of British Columbia
Part of the series: Economics Departmental Seminars

Co-authored with Sophia Du Plessis, Sahar Parsa andJames Robinson
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Abstract:
Research on female political representation has tended to overlook the traditional role of women as leaders across many societies. Our study aims to address this gap by investigating the enduring influence of historical female leadership on contemporary formal political representation in Africa. We test for this persistence by compiling two original datasets: one detailing female leadership in pre-colonial societies and another on current female representation in local elections. Our findings indicate that ethnic groups historically allowing women in leadership roles do tend to have a higher proportion of elected female representatives in today's formal local political institutions. We also observe that institutional factors, rather than economic ones, significantly shape traditional female political influence. Moreover, in accord with historical accounts, we uncover some evidence of a reversal of female political power due to institutional changes enforced by the colonists.
Bio:
https://sites.google.com/view/siwan-anderson/home
Posted on behalf of: business-research@sussex.ac.uk
Further information: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/economics-departmental-seminar-professor-siwan-anderson-tickets-1680123958989?aff=oddtdtcreator
Last updated: Thursday, 11 September 2025