In this Book

Walking the Gendered Tightrope: Theresa May and Nancy Pelosi as Legislative Leaders

Book
Melissa Haussman and Karen M. Kedrowski
2023
summary
Walking the Gendered Tightrope analyzes the gendered expectations for women in high offices through the examples of British Prime Minister Theresa May and U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. Even at their highest positions, and while completing their greatest achievements, both May and Pelosi faced gendered critiques and intraparty challenges to their leadership. While other books have analyzed the barriers to higher office that women face, this book reveals how women in positions of power are still forced to balance feminine stereotypes with the perception of power as masculine in order to prove their legitimacy. By examining intraparty dynamics, this book offers a unique comparison between a majoritarian presidential and Westminster parliamentary system. While their parties promoted Pelosi and May to highlight their progressive values, both women faced continually gendered critiques about their abilities to lead their caucuses on difficult policy issues, such as the Affordable Care Act and two Trump impeachment votes for Nancy Pelosi, or finishing Brexit for Theresa May. Grounded in the legislative literature from the United States and Britain, as well as historical accounts and personal interviews, Walking the Gendered Tightrope contributes to the fields of gender and politics, legislative studies, American politics, and British politics. 

Table of Contents

Cover

Half title page

pp. i

Series information page

pp. ii

Title page

pp. iii

Copyright page

pp. iv

Dedication

pp. v-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-x

One. Introduction

pp. 1-45

Two. How Female Leaders Get There: Party Workhorses but Not Party Animals

pp. 46-96

Three. Prime Minister May's Tightrope Walk between Brexiteers and Remainers

pp. 97-134

Four. Pelosi's Tightropes

pp. 135-182

Five. Staying On or Falling Off the Tightrope: Lessons Learned

pp. 183-194

Table 1

pp. 195-212

References

pp. 213-264

Index

pp. 265-274
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