British Journal of Politics and International Relations,
Vol. 3, No. 2, June 2001, pp. 173–190
In their own words:
New Labour women and the substantive
representation of women
1
SARAH CHILDS
Abstract
Political representation is an essentially contested concept. Contemporary feminist con-
ceptions claim a link between the presence of women and the potential for a feminised trans-
formation of politics. Previous empirical research in the UK, which examined the question
of women representatives’ attitudes, concluded that women representatives were attitudinally
more liberal/feminist than male representatives. This article extends the existing literature
through a consideration of how the new intake of Labour women MPs conceptualise
political representation. Three different dimensions are explored. First, the article examines
constituency-level representation focusing upon the women MPs’ perceptions of shared
identity, affinity and their relationships with women constituents. Secondly, the question of
whether women representatives perceive that women’s presence will effect a feminisation
within parliament by regendering the political agenda is considered. Finally, the impact
of women representatives’ presence in and on government is examined in relation to the
women representatives’ understanding of the role of the minister for women. The research
suggests that the new-intake Labour women MPs acknowledge a feminised dimension to
political representation, albeit a secondary one. This supports, in a qualified way, theoretical
and empirical arguments that women’s presence in politics has the potential to transform
women’s political representation.
Most analyses of women and politics in the United Kingdom focus upon
women’s numerical representation in politics. In particular, research
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