Fernández González, Juan JesúsValiente Fernández, Celia2022-03-162022-03-162021-08Fernández, J. J., & Valiente, C. (2021). Gender quotas and public demand for increasing women’s representation in politics: an analysis of 28 European countries. In European Political Science Review (Vol. 13, Issue 3, pp. 351–370). Cambridge University Press (CUP).1755-7739https://hdl.handle.net/10016/34389Female representation in political decision-making positions is now a salient issue in public discussions throughout Europe. Understanding public attitudes towards a more balanced gender distribution in politics remains limited, however. Using a 2017 Eurobarometer, we focus on cross-national differences in public support for increased female participation in politics to address this limitation. Building on the policy feedbacks literature, we stress the role of gender quotas. We argue that quotas - as legislative devices usually adopted through elite-driven initiatives - stimulate support for stronger female representation. Ensuing debates on quotas raise individual awareness about the underrepresentation of women - informational effect - and, once adopted, give a clear signal that persistent gender imbalance is a social problem to be redressed - normative effect. Our empirical analysis supports this argument. Citizens in countries with gender quotas display stronger support for increased female participation in politics.19eng© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of European Consortium for Political Research.Atribución 3.0 EspañaAttitudesEuropeGenderPolitical representationQuotasWomenGender quotas and public demand for increasing women's representation in politics: an analysis of 28 European countriesresearch articlePolíticahttps://doi.org/10.1017/S1755773921000126open access3513370European Political Science Review13AR/0000028927