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PDRI-DevLab Spring 2024 Seminar Series: Shanze Fatima Rauf

PDRI-DevLab is hosting a Spring 2023 Seminar Series featuring its staff and affiliates.

Seminar topic: The Revolution Starts at Home: Intra-Household Female Support and Civic Engagement

Presenter: Shanze Fatima Rauf (Joint work with Erik Wibbels and Diego Romero)

Session Details:

In many low and middle income countries where social norms are gendered, patrilocality and multi-generational co-residence are common. How do relations among women within these multi-generational households impact women’s political engagement? While multi-generational homes are typically thought to reinforce traditional norms, we highlight how support from other women within the household can challenge those norms and promote political engagement. We argue that the support of other women in the household is especially important when civic activities are communal in nature and women of the household can participate together. Importantly, support of other women of the household has the potential to offset the negative effects of lack of support of men, which has been documented to lower women’s political engagement. Fielding a novel civic engagement conjoint combined with a priming experiment to  767 women in Guatemala, a patriarchal society with entrenched gender norms and multi-generational patrilocality, we show that when women consider engaging in civic activities, they value the support of other women in the household just as much as the support of men in the household. Thus, support from other women within the household can be a catalyst from women’s civic mobilization.

This session will be a seminar-style presentation of 20-25 minutes followed by Q&A of 35-40 minutes. Participants are not required to read a paper beforehand.

For more information, reach out to pdri-devlab@sas.upenn.edu

 

Speakers

Shanze Fatima Rauf

Shanze Fatima Rauf is a PhD student in the Political Science department at Penn. She is interested in gender and political behavior, particularly in uncovering determinants which improve women’s access to the State. Before joining Penn, she was a Research Associate for projects on women’s political participation and mobility in Pakistan including the Metaketa V and DFID’s A4EA research programme. She has a Master’s degree in Politics from New York University where she was the recipient of the Fulbright Master’s Scholarship and GSAS Tuition Scholarship.

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