Sweet-Cushman Jennie
Department of History, Political Science, and International Studies, Chatham University.
Politics Life Sci. 2016 Fall;35(2):1-17. doi: 10.1017/pls.2016.13.
In the United States, women have long held the right to vote and can participate fully in the political process, and yet they are underrepresented at all levels of elected office. Worldwide, men's dominance in the realm of politics has also been the norm. To date, scholars have focused on supply-side and demand-side explanations of women's underrepresentation but differences in how men and women assess electoral risk (the risk involved in seeking political office) are not fully explained. To fill this gap, I explore how evolutionary theory offers insights into gendered differences in political ambition and the evaluation of electoral risk. Using the framework of life-history theory, I hypothesize that both cognitive and environmental factors in human evolution, particularly as they relate to sexual selection and social roles, have shaped the psychology of ambition in gendered ways affecting contemporary politics. Cognitive risk-assessment mechanisms evolving in the hominid line came to be expressed differently in females and males, in women and men. These gendered expressions plausibly reflect differentiable environmental pressures in the past and may help explain behaviors in and barriers to women’s electoral political activity in the present. If so, then the success of efforts to increase such activity — or, regressively, to suppress it — may be better understood.
在美国,女性长期以来拥有投票权并能充分参与政治进程,但在各级当选公职人员中她们的代表性却不足。在全球范围内,男性在政治领域的主导地位也一直是常态。迄今为止,学者们专注于从供给侧和需求侧解释女性代表性不足的问题,但男女在评估选举风险(寻求政治职位所涉及的风险)方面的差异尚未得到充分解释。为填补这一空白,我探讨进化理论如何为政治抱负和选举风险评估中的性别差异提供见解。利用生命史理论的框架,我假设人类进化中的认知和环境因素,特别是与性选择和社会角色相关的因素,以影响当代政治的性别化方式塑造了抱负心理。在人类进化谱系中演变而来的认知风险评估机制在女性和男性身上表现不同。这些性别化的表现可能反映了过去不同的环境压力,并有助于解释当前女性选举政治活动中的行为和障碍。如果是这样,那么增加此类活动的努力——或者相反,抑制此类活动的努力——的成功与否可能会得到更好的理解。